Society of Dance History Scholars

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Society of Dance History Scholars
AbbreviationSDHS
SuccessorDance Studies Association
Formation1978
TypeAcademic society
Legal statusmerged into Dance Studies Association

The Society of Dance History Scholars (SDHS) was a professional organization for dance historians in the United States and internationally. Founded in 1978,[1] it became a non-profit in 1983.[2] SDHS became a member of the American Council of Learned Societies in 1996, hosted an annual conference, published conference proceedings and a book series, and presented awards to new and established scholars. In 2017 it merged with the Congress on Research in Dance to form the Dance Studies Association (DSA).[3][4]

The Society included scholars in musicology, anthropology, history, literature, theatre, performance studies, and other fields. Many members combined research and performance, and SDHS welcomed graduate students, as well as more seasoned scholars, among its members. The society also contained several working groups, which met at the annual conference. SDHS had close ties with its peer organizations such as the Congress on Research in Dance (CORD).

Since 1988 the Society published a periodical, Studies in Dance History, which was redefined as a monograph series in 1994. It included various scholarly texts in dance history and was published by the University of Wisconsin Press.[5]

Awards offered[edit]

Working Groups[edit]

  • Dance History Teachers
  • Early Dance
  • Dance and Technology
  • Dancing the long nineteenth century
  • Popular, Social and Vernacular Dance
  • Practice-as-Research
  • Latin American, Latino and Caribbean Dance Studies
  • Students in SDHS

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Archives and manuscripts". New York Public Library.
  2. ^ Kolcio, Katja (Spring 2007). "A pillar supporting research in dance for 40 years". CORD Newsletter. XXVII (1). Congress on Research in Dance.
  3. ^ "A brief history of SDHS". Dance Studies Association.
  4. ^ "Dance Studies Association". American Council of Learned Societies.
  5. ^ Studies in Dance History

References[edit]