Birth of dance scholar Selma Jeanne Cohen
Selma Jeanne Cohen, who sought to make dance scholarship a respected academic discipline, was born on September 18, 1920. Early in her career, Cohen taught dance history at Hunter College and the High School of the Performing Arts, teaching many future dance company directors such as Arthur Mitchell, Bruce Marks, and Eliot Feld. She wrote a number of scholarly articles about dance, and struggled to make dance a credible subject of scholarly research. In 1959 she founded the quarterly journal, Dance Perspectives. The success of this journal eventually led to the publication of The International Encyclopedia of Dance (1997).
In 1962 she began to teach dance history at the American Dance Festival, which led to the creation of a program to train professional dance critics. She also wrote several books of dance scholarship, including The Modern Dance: Seven Statements of Belief (1966), Doris Humprey: An Artist First (1972), Dance as a Theatre Art: Source Readings in Dance History from 1581 to the Present (1974), and Next Week Swan Lake: Reflections on Dance and Dances (1982). Cohen was also a founder of the Society of Dance History Scholars. In 1981 she was the recipient of the first Dance Magazine Award to a dance historian. Cohen died in 2005.
Source: Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 252-254.
i am so glad to see Selma Jeanne Cohen honored here. She was a lovely whom I met in her later life, introduced by a theater historian. And she had a sweet cat named, of course, Giselle!
This accomplished lady made a statement about dance for all to see. History shows that it was up to her to pull together information and combine her own experiences into a valuable piece of dance literature.
Selma also created the Society of Dance History Scholars. All in all it seems fair to say she dedicated her life to dance and the history of dance for all of those who came after her. casino en ligne
Thanks for sharing.
There is nice info about her on wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...