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Circus Bodies

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This pioneering study is one of the major publications in the increasingly popular and largely undocumented area of circus studies. Through photographs and illustrations, Peta Tait presents an extraordinary survey of 140 years of trapeze acts and the socially changing ideas of muscular action in relation to our understanding of gender and sexuality. She questions how spectators see and enjoy aerial actions, and what cultural identities are presented by bodies in fast, physical aerial movement. Adeptly locating aerial performance within the wider cultural history of bodies and their identities, Circus Bodies explores this subject through a range of films such as Trapeze (1956) and Wings of Desire (1987) and Tait also examines live performances * the first trapeze Léotard and the Hanlon Brothers
* female celebrities; Azella, Sanyeah, black French aerialist LaLa, the infamous Leona Dare, and the female human cannonballs
* twentieth-century gender benders; Barbette and Luisita Leers
* the Codonas, Concellos, Gaonas, Vazquez and Pages troupes
* imaginative aerial acts in Cirque de Soleil and Circus Oz productions. This book will prove an invaluable resource for all students and scholars interested in this fascinating field.

200 pages, Paperback

First published August 25, 2005

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Peta Tait

20 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Madelyn.
771 reviews9 followers
November 9, 2023
“Kinetic aerial action is framed within potent, offstage emotional interactions between characters that heighten tensions about risk and missed opportunities in story, suspense and voyeurism”
Profile Image for Andy.
6 reviews2 followers
December 24, 2008
Interesting exposition of social-cultural issues around aerial performance from 1800s to present--challenges to conventional gender boundaries created by the combination of muscularity (masculine) and aerial grace (feminine)--cross dressing, eroticism, competition, violence, androgyny. Plus, the history of trapeze from Leotard to Cirque du Soleil.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews