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Dance in the Culture of the Irish and English: From Ritual Gesture to Social Code

The dance traditions of Ireland and England represent two deeply different but equally significant cultural texts. Their analysis allows us to see not only aesthetic preferences but also historical trajectories, social structures, and national mythologies of two peoples. Irish dance is a form of collective resistance and ethnic self-identification, while English dance is primarily an instrument of social stratification and regulation.

1. Irish Dance: Geometry as Manifesto

Irish dance, especially its solo forms, is striking for the rigidity of the upper body. Hands are tightly pressed against the torso, the face is expressionless, while the legs perform incredibly fast and complex rhythmic patterns. This unique feature has historical roots.

Politics and prohibitions: After the conquest of Ireland by the British crown in the 16th-17th centuries and the introduction of "penal laws," many aspects of Irish culture, including music and dance, were persecuted. Catholics were forbidden to teach anything, including dance. According to one hypothesis, the rigidity of the torso and hands developed as a forced measure: dancers could refine their skills sitting by the fireplace, watching only the work of the legs, or dancing in cramped conditions (in houses or barns) where it was impossible to wave hands. Dance became a hidden, secret knowledge, transmitted orally and visually, turning into an act of cultural resistance.

Kerry and step dances: There are two main directions. Kerry (Céilí) is a group dance, often in pairs, based on geometric constructions (circles, lines), dating back to ancient Celtic rituals. Step-dances (Irish stepdance) are virtuosic solo or group performances where the emphasis is on the technique of the feet. The rigidity of the upper part here emphasizes the complexity of the lower part of the body, creating a visual and kinetic paradox.

The phenomenon of "Riverdance" and globalization: The show "Riverdance" (1994), created for the Eurovision, became a cultural explosion. It globalized Irish dance but radically changed its aesthetics: added expression to the face, movements of the torso, elements of Spanish flamenco and Russian ballet, making it more theatrical.

Interesting fact: Competitions in Irish dance (feis) are a strictly regulated world with its own hierarchy. Dancers are classified by the level of skill (from beginner to champion), and judges evaluate not only technique but also the traditionality of the costume, where every detail (wig, embroidery, type of shoes) carries a meaningful load.

2. English Dance: Harmony of Order and Hierarchy

The English dance tradition, on the other hand, focuses on social interaction within a clearly defined structure.

Country dances: Originating in the Tudor era (16th century), these dances spread throughout Europe (including in Russia under the name "contredances"). Their essence is not in virtuosity but in geometric perfection and adherence to figures. Dancers form lines, squares, or circles, performing predetermined transitions, exchanges of partners, and movements. This was a model of ideal society: everyone knows their place and their trajectory, interacting with different partners within the framework of a common ritual. Jane Austen describes in her novels how balls and dances served as a micro-model of the social market of marriage.

Morris (Morris Dance): A ritual male dance, whose roots probably date back to pre-Christian fertility rituals. Characterized by rhythmic steps, the use of sticks, scarves, or bells attached to the feet. This is a calendar and ceremonial dance, often performed on holidays (such as May Day). Morris is not for spectators but for the community, marking time and belonging to a place.

Ball culture and contredance: In the 19th century, formalized ballroom dances (waltz, polka, кадриль) replaced rural country dances in high society, borrowed from the continent but adapted to strict English etiquette. Dance here became a demonstration of social graces and an instrument for maintaining class boundaries.

3. Comparative Analysis: Corporeality vs. Structure

The body as an instrument: In Irish step, the body is disciplined and dissected: the upper part is suppressed, the lower is hyper-developed. In English country dance, the body is subordinate to geometry and the scheme, its movements are functional and serve for moving in space relative to others.

Social function: Irish dance has long been a way to preserve identity under colonial oppression. English dance is an instrument of socialization and strengthening existing social hierarchy.

Improvisation: It is minimal in both traditions. But while improvisation in Irish dance is replaced by variability of the most complex combinations of feet within the rigid technique, in English it is replaced by impeccable knowledge and execution of figures.

Scientific perspective: Anthropologist John Blacking considered dance as "the physical embodiment of social relations." Irish step, with its closed upper part and expressive lower part, can be interpreted as a metaphor for a repressed externally but boiling internally national character. English structured contredance is the ideal model of a common law society, where freedom exists only within established and universally recognized rules and procedures.

Conclusion: Two Ways to Be in a Collective

The dance cultures of Ireland and England offer two opposite but complementary answers to the question of the connection between the individual and the group. The Irish dancer, even in the midst of an ensemble, conducts an intense dialogue with the floor, affirming his identity through virtuoso personal rhythm within the rigid school. The English dancer leads a dialogue with partners and space, dissolving individual skill in impeccable collective patterns. One dance tells the story of cultural survival through the discipline of the body, the other tells the story of society building through the discipline of interaction. However, both serve one goal: to claim the continuity and uniqueness of their people through movement in time and space.


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Dance in the culture of the Irish and English // London: British Digital Library (ELIBRARY.ORG.UK). Updated: 16.01.2026. URL: https://elibrary.org.uk/m/articles/view/Dance-in-the-culture-of-the-Irish-and-English (date of access: 26.05.2026).

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