[HouTango-L] Tango: The Art History of Love

A. Lester Buck III buck at compact.com
Mon Oct 10 15:58:58 UTC 2005


[Note: Excellent savings on books at www.addall.com:

http://www3.addall.com/New/submitNew.cgi?query=0-375-40931-9&type=ISBN

						-Lester]


JUST PUBLISHED:

"Thompson performs a fascinating dissection of tango, picking
apart its history with an enthusiast's passion and a scholar's
authority. Pulling references from poetry, painting, and most
potently from African dance, he shows us tango as an ecstatic
manifestation of life's emotional dynamics and inflames us with
his reverence for the form."

-Mikhail Baryshnikov

"Robert Thompson's Tango indeed is an aesthetic history of that
dance of heterosexual passion. The book has gusto, and its own
deep song of eloquent erotic ecstasy and sorrow.  It will inform
readers until they are wild with all regret."

-Harold Bloom

"I was startled to find how interesting this subject can be.
What a fine book."

-Norman Mailer

"In language no doubt inspired by the lyrics of its subject,
this serious volume examines and celebrates the cultural history
of the famed Argentine dance, conveying its real passion and the
author's passion for it. Thompson, the renowned Yale Africanist
and art historian, convincingly evokes the often-obscured African
roots of the dance, whose name comes from the Ki-Kongo word for
'moving in time to a beat'.... Hollywood versions of the dance
pale once Thompson beings to mine the riches of tango's rhythms,
lyrics, philosophy and steps...for fans of dance, music and
cultural history, this is the real deal."

-CPublishers Weekly (starred review)

 

In this generously illustrated book, world-renowned art historian
Robert Farris Thompson gives us the definitive account of tango,
"the fabulous dance of the past hundred years-and the most
beautiful, in the opinion of Martha Graham."

>From its syncretic evolution in the nineteenth century-partaking
of European, Andalusian-Gaucho, and, unbeknownst to many, African
influences-to its representations by Hollywood and dramatizations
in dance halls throughout the world, Thompson shows us tango
not only as brilliant choreography but also as text, music, art,
and philosophy of life.

As he did in his classic Flash of the Spirit: African and
Afro-American Art and Philosophy, Thompson, in this book,
"takes his subject in the round, not in any specialized or
compartmentalized manner. He is part anthropologist, part art
critic, part musicologist, part student of religion and philosophy,
and entirely an enthusiastic partisan of what he writes about"
(The New York Times).

Passionately argued; unparalleled in its research, its synthesis,
and its depth of understanding; and written with revelatory
clarity, Tango: The Art History of Love is a monumental
achievement.

 

About the Author

Robert Farris Thompson is a world-renowned Yale art historian
and author of the now-classic Flash of the Spirit: African and
Afro-American Art and Philosophy. He is also the author of, among
other works, Black Gods and Kings and African Art in Motion. He has
been a Ford Foundation Fellow and has mounted major exhibitions
of African art at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. He
is Col. John Trumbull Professor of the History of Art at Yale
University, where he is also Master of Timothy Dwight College. He
lives in New Haven.

 

TANGO: The Art History of Love

By Robert Farris Thompson 

Pantheon Books

September 20, 2005 / $28.50

ISBN: 0-375-40931-9

www.pantheonbooks.com 




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