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folk dance
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folk dance

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Tibetans perform a popular traditional dance. Dance, both secular and religious in origin, forms an important part of Tibetan cultural life.
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Dancer in colourful traditional costume, Buota Village, Tarawa, Kiribati (formerly the Gilbert Islands). Although the main religion of Kiribati is Christianity, traditional customs survive.
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Group of folk dancers, Hungary. Eastern Europe is rich in traditional dance and music.

Dance characteristic of a particular people, nation, or region. Many European folk dances are derived from the dances accompanying the customs and ceremonies of pre-Christian times. Some later became ballroom dances (for example, the minuet and waltz). Once an important part of many rituals, folk dance has tended to die out in industrialized countries. Examples of folk dance are Morris dance, farandole, and jota.



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By 1909, Elizabeth Burchenal, who directed the teachers who ran the Club and was just becoming chairman [sic] of the Folk-Dance Committee of the Playground Association of America, claimed to have trained over 250 (female) public school folk dance teachers.
With rictus smiles and humping hips, Koresh's dancers broadcast a knife-sharp sexiness as they moved through a dizzying range: from folk-dance parody through vacant, clubby frenzy to a kind of Hasidic ecstasy, all danced to the sinuous, Levantine sounds of Romany music.
But no one has so far quite solved the problem of transmogrifying step dancing from a folk-dance style into a creative form, escaping from the limited range of steps, and that tendency toward Rockette-like ensembles.
 
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