Abstract
Women's involvement within both performance and social dance has long been trivialized by cultural analysts and social historians alike. Dance has tended then, to be dismissed as `meaningless'. However, as Angela McRobbie's work has shown, dance can take on particular significance within the context of working-class femininity. This trivialization, or regulated ignoring of social dance, can then be located as part of the wider tendency which Carolyn Steedman describes as `the tradition of cultural criticism in this country which has celebrated a kind of psychological simplicity' within working-class life (1986: 12). The treatment of the life-narrative drawn upon in this article seeks to illustrate the complex meanings an involvement in dance can have within the context of a working-class girlhood and womanhood, and thus aims at highlighting how involvement within a popular cultural practice such as dance relates to the constitution of subjectivity.

This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit: