Standing at the beginning of a new century, but still faced with what was referred to at the end of the old one as the “politics of difference,” I find myself struggling with the daunting task of discussing extremely complex issues associated with dance scholarship. The issues I refer to revolve around the—all too familiar—divisions of class, gender, race, and other central signifiers of identity that have dominated a substantial part of scholarly discourse in various disciplines over the past two decades.
It is unrealistic to think that the change of the millennium clock has ushered in a new age of enlightenment that will ameliorate the kinds of confrontations over group identity that have, by now, become routine in American society. But it does not seem unrealistic to hope that a new level of clarity can be achieved in scholarly debates involving issues of racial identity and the arts—debates that, in the past, have elicited reactions ranging from indifference, to defensiveness, to volatility.
As an individual who has begun to take an active part in the divisive dialogues surrounding identity, art, and culture in turn-of-the-century America, and as an African American scholar involved in the growing field of dance studies, I have chosen to place issues of race at the forefront of the various identity markers that divide the human family into more circumspect sub-groups. In spite of the progress toward inclusiveness that dance as a performing art and as a field of intellectual pursuit has made, I believe that racially proscriptive thinking still exerts its presence with surprising force in different aspects of our discipline. My realization of the significant role that racial divisiveness plays in our society, our art, and our scholarship greatly shaped the direction of my research and is, indeed, reflected in much of the dance research undertaken by African American scholars today (1).