Trajetória(s) da dança jazz cênica no Brasil: ensino, história e performance
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
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This thesis investigates the historical trajectory(ies) of the teaching of theatrical jazz
dance in Brazil, analyzing processes of transmission, adaptation, and transculturation
from its introduction in the country up to 2026. The research understands jazz dance
as a performance that operates through embodied behaviors and repertoires
transmitted across generations. In the light of performance studies and drawing on a
performative ethnography methodology, the researcher, who is also a co-participant in
the investigated community, collected data through interviews with individuals who
currently teach or have taught jazz dance in Brazil, organized into three chronological
groups, as well as through consultation of bibliographic collections, documentaries,
videos on social media, and personal archival materials of interlocutors. The study
identifies that jazz teaching in Brazil has been constituted primarily through exchanges
with the United States and short-term courses, with a predominant focus on technical
transmission to the detriment of historical contextualization and the Afro-diasporic
origins of the dance. It shows that North American methodologies have been
selectively assimilated, giving rise to local teaching modes such as choreographed
warm-ups, which are configured as Brazilianized transmission technologies.
Dancers/teachers such as Lennie Dale, Vilma Vernon, Marly Tavares, Carlota Portella,
Joyce Kermann, and Roseli Rodrigues stand out as key agents in the consolidation
and dissemination of jazz dance throughout the country, fostering its adaptation to
Brazilian musicality and corporeality. The analysis reveals that, although there is
widespread recognition of the Afro-diasporic roots of jazz, this knowledge is rarely
translated into explicit pedagogical practices, producing historical erasures and
tensions between the preservation of Afro-diasporic elements and the influence of
Eurocentric aesthetics derived from ballet and modern dance. The study problematizes
the notion of a “Brazilian jazz,” arguing that, rather than a new style, what emerges is
a singular way of dancing, marked by the “accents” and “swings” of Brazilian bodies,
and it contributes to filling an academic gap in the historiography of jazz dance teaching
in Brazil at the doctoral level, offering support to rethink pedagogical practices that
integrate technique, history, and critical awareness while valuing Afro-diasporic
contributions to this artistic language.