Reading List

Essential Dance & Performing Arts Books

From Balanchine to Pina Bausch

Twenty books on the art of movement — tracing the history of ballet from Louis XIV to Balanchine, the radical experiments of Bausch and Cunningham, and the philosophy of the body in performance. From comprehensive histories to choreographers' own reflections, these volumes illuminate what is most ephemeral and most alive in the arts.

Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet

01

Apollo's Angels: A History of Ballet

Jennifer Homans

Homans traces ballet from its origins at the courts of the Italian Renaissance through Petipa, Balanchine, and the present in a sweeping narrative of breathtaking scholarship. The definitive history of an art form that has always been more than entertainment.

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Mr. B: George Balanchine's 20th Century

02

Mr. B: George Balanchine's 20th Century

Jennifer Homans

Homans's biography of Balanchine is as much a meditation on America as on the choreographer himself — tracing how a Georgian émigré became the defining artistic figure of the twentieth-century stage. Magisterial.

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Nureyev: The Life

03

Nureyev: The Life

Julie Kavanagh

The definitive biography of Rudolf Nureyev — his defection from the Soviet Union, his transformation of male dancing, his partnership with Fonteyn, and his last decade living with AIDS. Kavanagh had unparalleled access and uses it with authority.

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Diaghilev's Ballets Russes

04

Diaghilev's Ballets Russes

Lynn Garafola

The most comprehensive scholarly study of the company that revolutionized ballet, music, painting, and costume between 1909 and 1929. Garafola traces the collaborations among Stravinsky, Picasso, Cocteau, and Nijinsky with both depth and excitement.

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Diaghilev's Empire

05

Diaghilev's Empire

Rupert Christiansen

A vivid, accessible account of the Ballets Russes and its legacy for modern culture — written for readers who want narrative excitement rather than scholarly apparatus. Christiansen communicates why these seasons still matter.

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The Creative Habit

06

The Creative Habit

Twyla Tharp

Tharp's book on creativity distills decades of choreographic practice into practical wisdom about how art gets made — through preparation, ritual, failure, and disciplined risk. One of the most useful books about the creative process regardless of medium.

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Modern Bodies

07

Modern Bodies

Julia L. Foulkes

A cultural history of modern dance in America from the 1920s to the 1960s — tracing the intertwined careers of Graham, Humphrey, Weidman, and their students as they argued over what the new American body should express. Carefully researched and compellingly argued.

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The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Ballet

08

The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Ballet

Farrugia-Kriel & Jensen

A scholarly survey of ballet's current state across companies and choreographers worldwide — addressing technique, gender, race, technology, and the relationship between classical tradition and contemporary experimentation. Essential for understanding where ballet is now.

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Kazuo Ohno's World

09

Kazuo Ohno's World

Kazuo Ohno & Yoshito Ohno

The documents, photographs, and writings of the founding master of Butoh — one of the most extreme and spiritually serious performance traditions of the twentieth century. A window onto a world of performance utterly unlike Western theatrical dance.

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A Choreographer's Score

10

A Choreographer's Score

Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker

A book that presents de Keersmaeker's working methods as she creates a new piece — notes, drawings, rehearsal photographs, and the final notation. An unprecedented look at how contemporary choreography is actually made.

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The Borzoi Book of Modern Dance

11

The Borzoi Book of Modern Dance

Margaret Lloyd

The first comprehensive history of American modern dance, written in 1949 by a critic who witnessed the entire pioneer generation — Graham, Humphrey, Weidman, Tamiris — in performance. Irreplaceable as historical document.

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Moving History/Dancing Cultures

12

Moving History/Dancing Cultures

Ann Dils & Ann Cooper Albright

An anthology of essays covering dance history across cultures and time periods — from ancient ritual through jazz and hip-hop to contemporary practice. Designed for dance studies courses but accessible and illuminating beyond the classroom.

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Looking at Dances

13

Looking at Dances

Valerie Preston-Dunlop

Preston-Dunlop develops a systematic framework for analyzing choreographic works — considering space, time, dynamics, and the relationship between movement and intention. Essential methodological reading for dance scholars.

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Keep It Moving

14

Keep It Moving

Twyla Tharp

Tharp's meditation on aging and creativity, written in her late seventies, argues that movement is not metaphor but the literal substrate of a working life. More personal and philosophically richer than The Creative Habit.

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Pina Bausch: The Biography

15

Pina Bausch: The Biography

Marion Meyer

The first full biography of the German choreographer whose Tanztheater work transformed what dance could address — grief, desire, loneliness, the violence of social convention. Meyer worked closely with Bausch's company and achieves remarkable intimacy.

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The Routledge Dance Studies Reader

16

The Routledge Dance Studies Reader

Alexandra Carter

A foundational anthology for the academic study of dance — covering performance analysis, historical methods, feminist theory, cultural studies, and the relationship between movement and meaning. The standard text for graduate courses.

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Diaghilev: A Life

17

Diaghilev: A Life

Sjeng Scheijen

A major biography of the man who was not a choreographer, composer, or designer but made everything possible by recognizing genius in others. Scheijen traces Diaghilev's formation in St. Petersburg and his half-reluctant modernism.

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The Bloomsbury Companion to Dance Studies

18

The Bloomsbury Companion to Dance Studies

Sherril Dodds

A comprehensive reference work surveying the disciplinary landscape of dance scholarship — its key theorists, methodologies, and ongoing debates. An invaluable orientating guide for advanced students and researchers.

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Martha Graham: When Dance Became Modern

19

Martha Graham: When Dance Became Modern

Neil Baldwin

A biography of the woman who remade American dance by insisting that the moving body could express the unconscious, myth, and social conflict with as much authority as any other art form. Baldwin handles the difficult late years with honesty.

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Twenty-Eight Artists and Two Saints

20

Twenty-Eight Artists and Two Saints

Joan Acocella

Acocella's collected profiles from The New Yorker include some of the finest dance criticism ever written — on Nijinsky, Baryshnikov, Mark Morris, and Pina Bausch. She makes the transient visible to readers who may never have seen the work.

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