Many hope that Misty Copeland is ushering in a new era for ballet. She is the first female African American ballet dancer to have the role of Principal Dancer at the American Ballet Theatre. She has literally changed the face of the dance.
Race is a central and important part of her story, but in A Ballerina’s Tale, the documentary featuring her career, she describes herself as defying not just one, but three ideas about what ballerinas are supposed to look like: “I’m black,” she says, and also: “I have a large chest, I’m muscular.”
In fact, asked to envision a prima ballerina, writes commentator Shane Jewel, what comes to most of our minds is probably a “perilously thin, desperately beautiful, gracefully elongated girl who is… pale as the driven snow.” White, yes, but also flat-chested and without obvious muscularity.
It feels like a timeless archetype — at least as timeless as ballet itself, which dates back to the 15th century — but it’s not. In fact, the idea that ballerinas should be painfully thin is a new development, absorbing only a fraction of ballet’s history, as can clearly be seen in this historical slideshow.
It started in the 1960s — barely more than 50 years ago — in response to the preferences of the influential choreographer George Balanchine. Elizabeth Kiem, the author of Dancer, Daughter, Traitor, Spy, calls him “the most influential figure in 20th century dance,” ballet and beyond. He co-founded the first major ballet school in America, made dozens of dancers famous, and choreographed more than 400 performances. And he liked his ballerinas wispy: “Tall and slender,” Kiem writes, “to the point of alarm.” It is called, amongst those in that world, the “Balanchine body.”
We’re right to view Copeland’s rise with awe, gratitude, and hope, but it’s also interesting to note that two of the the ceilings she’s breaking (by being a ballerina with breasts and muscles) have only recently been installed. It reminds me how quickly a newly introduced expectation can feel timeless; how strongly it can ossify into something that seems inevitable; how easily we accept that what we see in front of us is universal.
In The Social Construction of Reality, the sociologists Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann explain how rapidly social inventions “harden” and “thicken.” Whoever initiates can see it for what it is — something they created — but to whoever comes next it simply seems like reality. What to Balanchine was “I will do it this way” became to his successors “This is how things are done.” And “a world so regarded,” Berger and Luckmann write, “attains a firmness in consciousness; it becomes real in an ever more massive way, and it can no longer be changed so readily.”
Exactly because the social construction of reality can be so real, even though it was merely invented, Copeland’s three glass ceilings are all equally impressive, even if only one is truly historic.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 8
Misty Copeland and the Newness of the Ballerina Body | Adios Barbie — May 2, 2016
[…] By Lisa Wade originally published on The Society Pages […]
Shepherd — May 5, 2016
I've been dancing professionally for an elite ballet company for the last 5 years. Misty Copeland's struggles are universal in the ballet world. No one has a perfect ballet body. Many, many professional dancers struggle with having breasts and muscles. The fact that anyone could see her as an anomaly is so weird to me. I've taken class with her at Steps On Broadway is NYC and saw her change in the locker room. She is TINY. Very fine boned and slender. She has great legs and feet. She is no more busty or muscular than any other ballet dancer I've ever seen. Infact, other than the fact that she is super short, I'd consider her a pretty fit-the-mold ballet dancer.
She is half black. That is definitely a big deal in the ballet world. But other than that, I do not get what all the hubbub is about.
Lovely Links: 5/20/16 - Already Pretty | Where style meets body image — May 20, 2016
[…] Misty] Copeland’s rise with awe, gratitude, and hope, but it’s also interesting to note that two of the the ceilings she’s breaking (by being a ballerina with breasts and muscles) have only r…. It reminds me how quickly a newly introduced expectation can feel timeless; how strongly it can […]
Rambles: Coming of Age Rituals – blog — August 17, 2019
[…] 4. I think we should have a coming of age ritual. But what would a modern one look like? My first thought was that you can’t just make one up, since they’re entrenched in tradition. But some examples that I gave aren’t particularly ritualistic at all, and honestly, it doesn’t take very long at all for traditions to get entrenched. […]
GEORGE — October 22, 2020
She is TINY. Very fine roms boned and slender. She has great legs and feet.
Mina Lister — January 10, 2024
The Swan Lake ballet has always been famous since its long history. The roles of black swan and white swan are always challenges for ballet artists bubble shooters.
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