moksha wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 6:53 am
Was this really put on by the school as a "romantic dance"? I assumed this was to teach kids how to dance. I remember in elementary school being taught the waltz, foxtrot, box step kind of stuff.
Yes. Absolutely. Definitely.
We don't know exactly what the school was doing or what their intentions were. But, whatever they are doing definitely exists within a greater social construct.
What is the value in teaching them how to dance? I recognize there could be several that aren't romance related. In an age when schools cut non-core subjects, art, music, physical education, recess, though, somehow this dance remains essential and worth spending significant effort on for this school. People ask, What is the value in learning math? When will the student ever use it? Or, art. Will it profit them? While much of those questions are misguided, we can certainly ask that with regards to the foxtrot. How is knowing waltz going to benefit them? How will they use the box step in their life?
There's an easy answer: these dances are used in social situations, involving pairing up into couples, with romantic undertones, or generally overtones. Oh, a few people might use them in performances. Ever seen any movies with these dances? Are there romantic story-lines involved? We may not expect these 6th graders to pair up and get a hotel afterwards (though some of them might find a secluded location) but what they are doing is playing at being grown-up (at least sexually mature) and practicing social coupling activities.
If this weren't about romance, why the resistance to what some of us have suggested, line, group, circle, square, or Maypole? Why isn't the school already doing that type of dance? What makes the waltz more important for the kids to learn than the Chicken Dance, the Electric Slide, or Gangnam Style? Or folk dances from around the world to bring in cultural awareness?
But the school indicated pretty clearly that the dance is focused on romantic pairing. From the article:
Prior to the dance, which is voluntary, students are told to fill out a card by selecting five people they want to dance with. The administration says if there’s someone on the card you feel uncomfortable with, the student is encouraged to speak up.
That right there clearly sets the whole tone and context. The students are supposed to pick who they want to dance with. And if they want to deal with the social pressure, or contribute to marginalization, speak up about who they don't. The context is totally clear. They are supposed to pick someone of the opposite sex who they like. That's romantically based.
If it were really about learning the dances, that would be done in class with random pairings. There wouldn't be this build-up about who likes who and who gets the opportunity to pair up with who and who isn't liked.
Now, no one is saying that we shouldn't have these romantic dances, these pairing events for sixth-graders. We're not sure they're entirely necessary. We're suggesting their might be some better options. And we're definitely criticizing some of the practices.
Since this dance is romantically-based, both within the structure in which it's organized and the larger context in which such dances exist, it is well worth examining how the practices in this dance play into long-term social dynamics. And reinforcing to girls that they can't say no is a bad one. It's a core grooming technique.
moksha wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 6:53 am
No emphasis was put ... in teaching the girls to accept a lifetime of male abuse. Have times changed that much?
It's not that the dance has to put an emphasis on teaching that, because that teaching is all around. This practice merely reinforces it. Codifies it even. Boys are taught in a myriad different ways that when they ask a girl for something, she can't say no. They should get it because of their nature and because they want it. Girls are taught that they must demure and acquiesce to boys demands. Their concerns are irrelevant. They should ignore their creep-o-meter.
The whole Aziz Ansari story is exactly like this. He felt that he should insist and coerce and she should not say no. Whatever the level of his misdeed, it's clear he wasn't putting her interests and needs on a high priority. She felt limited in how she could say no. That wasn't caused by a 6th-grade dance that told them she couldn't say no but by thousands and thousands of cuts.
And unfortunately, no, times really haven't changed much. Woman are no longer legally the property of men, but they are still conditioned to submit to what men request.