So You Think You Can (Belly) Dance?

by Racialicious special correspondent Fatemeh Fakhraie, originally published at Muslimah Media Watch

It’s time to set the record straight, everyone. So here it is: belly dancing is not a significant facet of Middle Eastern culture. It’s a dance, not a lifestyle (not according to most Middle Eastern people, anyway).

I’ve had one too many people ask me if I belly dance when they hear about my religion or ethnicity. Belly dancing is something that is present in some form of another in most Middle Eastern cultures, but is not really a part of our identity. And I assure you, nowhere in the Holy Qur’an does it say, “Thou shalt belly dance.” But because of Hollywood’s old Orientalist glamour, images of belly dancing have become almost synonymous with the Middle East.

I can’t help but get irritated when someone assumes that s/he and I automatically have something in common because s/he belly dances. The truth of a real-live Middle Eastern woman belly dancing seems to validate all those silly images that come into one’s head about spangly costumes and the Dance of the Seven Veils. Belly dancing has a host of sexualized and savage images attached to it, and if Middle Eastern/Muslim women confess to belly dancing (for exercise, as a career, for fun, or whatever), those images get attached to us, and we no longer have individual thoughts or lifestyles. We don’t take care of our parents or our children, we don’t have jobs or have opinions about health care reform, we just belly dance. Like it’s all we do, all day. This is why it’s insulting when someone thinks s/he knows what it’s like to be a Middle Eastern/Muslim woman because s/he’s taken a belly dancing class or read a book about it. The image of a Middle Eastern woman belly dancing seems to take away from our identity: it erases who we really are, our different nationalities and ethnicities, our emotions, our day-to-day existence.

Now, let me assure you: my problem isn’t with the dance itself. Belly dancing is a great way to connect with one’s sensuality, to exercise, and to appreciate the body that God gave you. Nor is my problem with non-Middle Eastern women (or men) belly dancing (or with Middle Eastern people dancing).

What bothers me is the adoption of a caricatured Middle Eastern identity through coin-bedazzled bras and Middle Eastern stage names like “Amina” or “Vashti.” If you’re a non-Middle Eastern performer, why give yourself a Middle Eastern stage name? What’s wrong with a name that reflects your own ethnicity or interests? Is it not “ethnic” or “exotic” enough? Besides, how would you feel if someone else used the name your parents gave you (that perhaps also belonged to your grandmother or aunt) as a stage name for an act that most people in your culture consider shameful if done publicly? (Cultural lesson: in most parts of the Middle East, belly dancing is often a cover for illicit activities.)

Similarly, dance troupe names like “Desert Queens” or “Daughters of Scheherazade” serve the same exoticizing purpose when these troupes are full of non-Middle Eastern women set in a non-Middle Eastern setting (like Austin, Texas, for example, which hosted a Belly Dancing Convention last July).

I take offense at the presentation of Middle Eastern “culture” through things like transparent veils, coin necklaces, and henna tattoos because reducing the Middle Eastern experience to some jingly coins and a scimitar takes the humanity right out of us. Elements of Middle Eastern/Muslim stereotypes are irreparably attached to the use of swords, snakes, and veils. These props serve to reinforce the idea of Muslim/Middle Eastern women as dangerous, sexually arousing, sexually submissive, and just plain different from women in the West.

Performers (Middle Eastern or non-Middle Eastern) highlight these images when they balance swords on their heads and give themselves henna tattoos. The inclusion of these props is often used to authenticate a Middle Eastern experience, making the performance or venue more like the “Mysterious Orient,” in which Middle Eastern women are acquiescing sexual props and Middle Eastern men are brutal and dangerous.

Why is this acceptable? These practices (other than henna for holidays and weddings) aren’t even Middle Eastern: Egyptian performers borrowed the ideas for these spangly suits from Hollywood in the early twentieth century. And no Middle Easterner just walks around all day with a sword perched atop her head. Belly dancing doesn’t even traditionally show off the stomach: a scarf is tied around one’s hips (over regular, concealing clothing) to emphasize the movements. So how did we get to sparkly bras and coin jewelry?!

Because sex sells! Early colonial performers knew what their (often Western or male) audiences wanted to see: sexuality. A pretty girl dancing sensually for the male gaze. Using veils in performances reiterates this: sashaying a veil under one’s heavily-painted eyes is done to entice and enchant, and is associated with the traditional face veils that upper-class (and thus inaccessible) Turkish, Egyptian, and Iranian women used to wear before (or during) colonization.

The problem is that belly dancing is permeated will all of these negative Orientalist dancing harem girl images. Can one belly dance without the coins, the henna, and/or swords? I think so. A long time ago, it was all about the scarf tied around the hips. It’s not flashy, but it’s sincere.

Trackbacks & Pings

  1. episcopophagous » del.icio.us: November 6th - November 7th on 07 Nov 2007 at 7:56 pm

    […] So You Think You Can (Belly) Dance? at Racialicious - the intersection of race and pop culture dancing race/ethnicity relig-islam race/ethnicity-arabs racism identity sex-sexuality stereotypes […]

  2. Jundullah | The Belly of the Beast: Belly Dancing as a new form of Orientalism on 01 Dec 2007 at 5:13 pm

    […] As featured on Racialicious. […]

Comments

  1. jd wrote:

    holy shit. I always knew there were a lot of stupid people in this world, but thinking you understand all about the vastness of Muslim life because you took a stupid belly dancing class? that’s like thinking “hmm, I could learn all about the political strife in Northern Ireland by learning about the centuries of struggle dating back to the Normans, or by just drinking some Guiness.”

    and while I’m making comparisons to the Irish (care to guess my ethnic background?) - why the hell is it called belly dancing? how does that not tip people off to the weird Orientalist fetishization? I learned traditional Irish dances as a child and we called it “Irish dancing” not “foot dancing” or “pretend you have a giant pole up your ass and can’t bend dancing”

  2. Jen* wrote:

    ok. I’ve just gotta tell this story. My boss is Egyptian, and she got married last year. [She had a private wedding and invited us all to the reception.] She also let us know that there would be a belly dancer there, according to tradition. Several people from work were invited to the reception, one being THE epitome of a ‘good ol’ boy’. He’s quite a drinker, loud, and has no shame. Ever. [this is not to say that all good ol’ boys are like this]

    So, our coworker comes in to the reception a little bit tipsy. [carrying a tall can of beer in a paper bag] The belly dancer is doing her thing, very well, with her mother looking on [as her mother comes to all of her engagements]. My boss’s family from Egypt and the states are all there. And our coworker comes to the edge of the dance floor where the belly dancer is, and pulls out a roll of one dollar bills. He then proceeds to shout out things like, “Yeah, baby!” and “Take it off!”

    If I could have melted into my chair, I would have been much happier - and I wasn’t even the bride. He was there for about 10 minutes - after which he was asked to calm himself. He took this as a request to leave, which he did.

    And the rest of the folks continued to ask those of us who knew him - he WORKS with y’all?

    Most people are not anywhere NEAR this crass, but it only takes one. Thankfully, after he left, the party continued, with great food and great fun.

  3. egypt4 wrote:

    Great entry. And of course I have a story to share.

    I actually saw a traditional, real-deal Egyptian woman belly dancer… at a work iftar! She is one of my colleagues, a middle-aged lady, and after we ate, the music started. She took a long white scarf and tied it around her hips over her conservative blouse and skirt. And her dancing was AMAZING, really sexy and quite beautiful. Another colleague told me she used to dance in movies, and I believed it.

    Visitors to Egypt, however, might not be faulted for thinking that bras and see-through pants and jingly coins are part of the traditional outfit, as they are sold EVERYWHERE you go in Cairo. In sizes for little girls, too. Yuck. But people must be buying them or they wouldn’t be so ubiquitous.

    I’ve heard that the real belly dancing scene has gone underground here in Egypt because of the growing conservative cultural movement. It’s too bad as it’s obviously a beautiful art in its true manifestations.

  4. Keke wrote:

    Unfortunately, I’ve seen all too often the assumptions people make with belly dance. Instead of really putting it in perspective, most people just make a snap judgment. It’s a dance form like any other, and not everyone does it.

    It’s like that time someone came up to me and literally said “Hey I understand the history and struggle of African Americans because I took two days worth of African dance. You do know African dance don’t you?” I informed her that A: I don’t know anything about African dance. B: Africa is a huge continent with tons of different ethnic identities and affiliations and I’m sure not everyone does that particular style of dancing and C: not every African American you meet does it or may even care. And finally D: African American indicates my ancestral origin and does not denote an association with any particular African culture.

    I know I’m venting,but I do think people just assume a glance at a textbook, a few classes and an interest in something makes them an authority on an entire country or continent of people. I agree with you jd, the term “belly dancing” in itself should tip people off. It was coined during the world’s fair back in the 1800’s I think. It’s an American term and most people just like hanging on to the ideas of the sexually charged “other” instead of looking further. *sigh*

  5. Mireille wrote:

    The hookah bars about a block from my house play up the orientalist themes for the sake of profit but the belly dancers that’s I’ve seen there are really very skilled. I never thought anyone would equate them inherently with Islam…That just makes no sense.

  6. Anonymous wrote:

    I agree that bellydancing has always been fetishized by Americans. If it weren’t for old Hollywood movies there probably wouldn’t have ever been dancers in 2 piece costumes at all.

    However, I don’t know how much I agree with bellydancing still being equated with Middle Eastern culture. I don’t think the youth in this country even knows any history or cultural significance of the dance. Nowadays, bellydancing is equated with Shakira, who is of course half Middle Eastern but by no means a bellydancer. I taught a bellydance class at a university once and all the girls were asking me to teach them Shakira moves. Sad, really. And what’s even sadder is nowadays people in this country equate the Middle East with religious misconceptions and terrorism, and not the rich culture it has to offer.

  7. Ashley wrote:

    OMG! Thank-you for this article! As a belly dancer of about eight years now, I know exactly what you are talking about. Especially with the ‘caricatured Middle Eastern identity’. Excellent article.

    I have yet to begin performing in restaurants and such yet, but when I do it will be under my own name. Lol!

  8. Enna Tiganis wrote:

    Speaking of which, it is also quite a stereotype that belly dancing only remains in one culture, when in fact-as part Macedonian myself: belly dancing is also included in its history. But I completely understand when it is said that belly dancing does not and should not become a attachment to one race due to it creating stereotypes following this and over sexualized images of what North Americans interpret as belly dancing.

  9. Katie wrote:

    I see this fetishization happening alot in the SCA subculture (Society for Creative Anachronism - kind of like medieval reenactment).

  10. cyberfish wrote:

    The proper nomenclature of the dance is “raqs sharki”. And of course the Qu’ran wouldn’t say thou shalt not bellydance since it was revealed in Arabia, and not Egypt where Raqs Sharki specifically has its origins. Further, this form of dance predates Islam by about 700 years.

  11. luckyfatima wrote:

    a GREAT post, so true every last word!!!

    once this professional belly dancer, not ME or Muslim actually gave me a long lecture on how backwards Muslims are for having a stigma about female performers (the prostitution thing) since it is such an art form and blah blah blah. She had such deep insights, she should become an Islamic scholar, really!

    At the same time there is nothing more fun than an all female party when someone inevitablt puts of the music and the scarves go to the hips! No sequins anywhere, too bad for us!

  12. Daomadan wrote:

    Katie: I agree. I grew up attending SCA events and have watched it turn from primarily European garb to white folks appropriating Chinese, Japanese, and Middle Eastern clothing, often without understanding what they are wearing. I lived in Japan a number of years and I cannot even express how much it bothers me to see someone throw on a second-hand kimono and geisha wig and pass it off as historical garb. /mini rant

  13. Robin wrote:

    Luckyfatima: Heh! Next time you talk to someone like that, you should point out how recently it is in the West that women performers (actresses, singers, dancers) were seen as being loose women of low character. Tell her to research Isadora Duncan or Maud Allan. Draw some pithy parallels to the demonizing of the behavior of modern female celebrities.

  14. Mimi wrote:

    My sister in law travelled to Istanbul last year where she bought her daughter one of the two piece outfits. They also went to a restaurant/club where the belly dancers were imported blonde Russian women. Ironic and telling at the same time.

  15. Anonymous wrote:

    Nice post Fatemeh,
    I like how you distinguish the dance from the religion.

  16. durerealite wrote:

    Hi, I put up this article in an online community for bellydance and it generated a lot of comments offering, mainly alternative views to the opinion presented in this piece. Here’s the link:

    http://community.livejournal.com/bellydancing/1987748.html?view=19133092#t19133092

  17. Wendy wrote:

    Venting on how belly dancing is completely inaccurate I understand. It really has nothing to do with the middle eastern culture. We know that, however society and the rest of the world does not.
    Bashing what belly dance does to the culture, and the dance groups that are out there promoting isn’t neccessarily the route to take. With the war in the Middle East I think that belly dancing (be it ridiculous in its Americanized form) opens doors, and helps some peoples ideal in a positive way of the culture. Be it accurate or not, it is a positive light on the American audience….anything to help with the tension and prejudice that is going on today. So when you see the dancer(Princess Fatima) in her flashy heavily sequined, completely inaccurate belly dance costume just smile. She isn’t trying to make a cultural statement. Isn’t trying to offend you. She just wants to dance.

  18. kitty wrote:

    Dance is an evolving art form. To assume that a dance must remain “historically accurate” to be culturally viable is to assume that dance is the “past” and must remain static.

    Further the dance is not one homogenous thing. MANY cultures had a form of dance like bellydance. Not all of those cultures were muslim cultures. This style of dance has mutated and changed forms over thousands of years. It’s got a long and varied history.

    It’s unfair to get all up in arms about the latest mutation in ONE place of the dance. American bellyance is just as valid as dance actually originating from the middle east. Art always grows, shifts, evolves. So there is a fetishistic “harem” fantasy involved in American bellydance? So what?

    What people fail to understand is…no one owns this stuff. These movements of the body belong to all women who choose to embrace them. Not a certain culture.

    To get “offended” because your culture is being denigrated is to assume two things: 1. that your culture is contained in one simple expression and 2. that other people were commentating on your culture in the first place.

  19. Vance wrote:

    What many people don’t know is that one of the origins of belly dancing was in the birthing tent where a woman’s sisters and friends would belly dance in front of her during childbirth… Why? To help ease the labor pains, of course… Thus, something very practical and sensual, converted over time into something else… And yes, the origins are, in part, Middle Eastern, but they pre-date Islam by centuries if not millenia… Just like the veil…

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