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Artwork by Author- Erica
Gilded Serpent presents...
What's in a Name?
A Dancer's Response to Margo's poem "Much, Much, More"
by Erica
of the United Kingdom

I apologize to anyone who feels diminished and tarnished by Western appropriation of their cultural heritage turning its labels on them. I cannot speak for anyone else female or male. This is how I feel:

“Fine, call me a belly dancer, but put a capital letter to it!

I am a woman of European heritage.
Even though it feels like these movements have been in me forever, I have no cultural heritage to defend or worry about representing when I dance. I am what you see; I take no other name, I can make no pretence at authenticity.
I honour the wisdom and teaching of those traditions from which I learn.
I dance with respect for these cultures, their movements and techniques. They have awoken a response in me that has nothing to do with race or culture.
Please do not patronize me with false modesties. I dance with joy and dignity.

Call me a Belly dancer; after all, it’s what you came to see.

Sharp and sensuous hips, arms hypnotic or precise, the richly decorated costume of earthly delights; these may stir you.
Yet it’s those sinuous torso moves that make me extra-ordinary!
Ultimate, mesmerizing control of muscle and form rippling in waves, descending in pops – these fascinate you and define me for you.
Of course that’s not all there is, and sometimes it’s never seen – but why should you know that? It is your box, not mine; I do not have to walk meekly into it.

You may call me a Belly dancer, I know what I am.

Out of all dance forms, that is what makes me unique. I proudly display, covered or free, that rounded chamber of womanhood. I am mystery made flesh demure or of awesome size. If I were a man you would marvel at my skill, my toned muscles, my connection with my body. (Oh, boy! Who is a stereotyped as a sex-object now?)
Male or female, this dance is a primeval display of virility/fertility and power. I aspire to this control. It does not come easily. I do not want to show off, but to isolate, integrate, worship and play.
I do not claim authenticity; I claim love, enchantment, challenge and joy.

So call me a Belly dancer!

My family shuffled awkwardly only at weddings, or attempted a couple of ballroom numbers at best. I grew up without an appreciation of any type of music – my cultural heritage or not.
As a child, my energy, my desire to move was channeled into the circumscription of ballet. Performing was “showing-off”. There was no sharing of dance histories or experiences, joining the generations at family get-togethers.
My grandmother may have danced the Charleston; not because she approved of cultural appropriation, but simply because movement felt joyful and good.
Thank you, for all your rich traditions willingly shared, which have opened me personally and spiritually.

Call me a Belly dancer; it’s a start.

Art does not need an audience, but performers do.
We can happily dance for ourselves, for friends, for family.
So does dancing for money cheapen professional dancers?
Is their beauty and skill devalued by the use of one sticky little word, especially if it is not in their cultural background? They put their reputations and that of their dance on the line for love and money. Of course we all worry about what people think.
You and I can never control the thoughts in someone else’s head, the contexts of their associations with our dance. We can only give them something to take way in their hearts.

So when you call me a Belly dancer, remember:

It is a label that focuses on so little, but opens the windows of experience to so much.
From the technically brilliant to the artistically limited, audiences respond to dancers when they show passion, inhabiting the dance, intuiting the music, projecting their love.
What you call me does not change the scared dedication of my dancing.
I try to absorb and project the essence of my original influences. My connection with the music and the audience and the Spirit tickles at the unconscious of the unaware.
You may have come to see the exotic, erotic, gratuitous dancer, but what matters is what adjectives you have on your tongue for me when you leave.

Call me the inspiring, amazing, unexpected Belly dancer!

Have you named it Danse Oriental, Danse du Ventre, Raks Sharki, Arabic, Persian, Egyptian, Turkish, Greek, Balkan, Tribal, Fusion, holy, unholy, lewd, refined, Hollywood, or folkloric?
Call me Belly dancer because it sends countless conflicting images spinning through your head.
Call me what you will because it will not change the light in my eyes and my pleasure in moving in ancient echoes of all our pasts.

So, call me Belly dancer, sit back, and watch with an open heart.”

While we are on the subject of calling names, here is a sister poem that evolved from the above:

“Call me Xena: I am a strong, fearless woman.
Call me Salome; I was a dangerous child.
Call me Jezebel, Zenobia, Cleopatra; I hear you calling me “powerful queen”.
Call me Lilith, Isis, Ishtar: I honour the Divine in all things.
Call me Scarlet Woman because you fear me when I bleed without dying
Call me Painted Woman; I only wear the glamour of beauty. Truth is on the inside.
Call me any name you choose. You only link me to every woman who ever lived.”

Have a comment? Send us a letter!
Check the "Letters to the Editor" for other possible viewpoints!

Ready for more?
4-26-06 Much, Much More by Margo Abdo O'Dell
Please do not call me a belly dancer. Because for me, it is not just a flip of the hip, the wink of an eye.
It is not just the sparkle of jewels, the want of applause.

2-12-02 What's in a Name by Sadira
We lived and breathed the dance and its ethnic beauty.

11-2-06 The Constant Grind by Margo Abdo O'Dell
Today, the bitter truth is that the curvaceous and fleshy female figure is constantly disrespected by the media and pop culture.

11-15-06 The Road to Heck is Paved With… Good Intentions and Stone Throwing? by Nisima
Since the conflicts of interest seem obvious, why cannot the parties involved negotiate these conflicts -- or avoid them in the first place?

11-10-06 How I Started a Bellydance Club in High School by Shazadi
I expected hardly anyone to show up at the first meeting. I was shocked when over 40 girls showed up and were very excited about the whole idea. So I was able to prove interest.

11-8-06 The Ethnic Dance Festival 2006 Photos by Susie Poulelis
Weekend One, June 10, 2006, Palace of Fine Arts, San Fransico, CA


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