Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Marian Hannah Winter

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Name
  
Marian Winter


Role
  
Historian

Marian Hannah Winter John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Marian Hannah Winter

Died
  
December 15, 1981, Paris, France

Books
  
Art Scores for Music, The Pre-Romantic Ballet

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada

Marian Hannah Winter (1910 – 15 December 1981) was an American dance historian. She has been called one of "the [two] foremost names in American dance history."

Marian Hannah Winter John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Marian Hannah Winter

In the 1940s, dance historian Lincoln Kirstein solicited Winter to write for Dance Index, a magazine he headed. In contrast to Kirstein's analytical or polemical approach to history, Winter was more of an archivist.

One of Winter's most influential works is "Juba and American Minstrelsy", published in 1947. The article sketches the life of Master Juba, a black American dancer active in the mid-19th century. Winter argues that Juba introduced African elements to American dance forms and, in the process, created a new, distinctly American style. The article thus attempts to "[re-appropriate] for black culture what is otherwise generally seen as racist theft."

Winter moved to France in her later years. There, she published The Theater of the Marvels in both English- and French-language editions. She died in Paris.

References

Marian Hannah Winter Wikipedia