Dance

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(Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils and BDSM)
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Some [[dominant]]s enjoy seeing their [[submissive]] '''dance''' for them, and quite a few submissives, especially females, enjoy the pleasure they can give when dancing for the one they are serving. Dances are mostly informal moves and may be made to music or without external sound.
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[[Image:Twirling Dancers with Skirts.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Twirling dancers]]
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Solo slave '''dances''' feature in [[BDSM]] fiction and form a significant part of the [[Gor]] sub-culture and books. Dances are performed by submissives (almost invariably female) for the enjoyment of their masters, and have a strong [[D/S]] element to them. An investigation of the [[Informed consent]] archives found very few discussions on slave dances, which would suggest that it is not an activity that is performed in the wider BDSM community.
  
Two of the most well-known pleasure dances are the 'belly dance' and the 'pole dance'.  Neither has a strict set of moves or sequences but each has its own focus which an experienced viewer might expect to see.  Most pleasure dances are even less formal.  Often, the dancer creates his or her own dance to enhance his or her own body while incorporating what he or she is capable of and missing out on what he or she has yet to learn.
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Needless to say, dancing also features in many [[fetish club]]s both as an activity and an entertainment; however, in this context it is no different to dancing in a [[vanilla]] club.
  
Slave dances are an important part of the culture described in the ''[[Gor]]'' books.
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Two of the best-known types of solo pleasure dances are the "[[belly dance]]" and the "[[pole dance]]".  Neither has a strict set of moves or sequences, but each has its own focus which an experienced viewer might expect to see.  Most pleasure dances are even less formal.  Often, the dancer creates his or her own dance to enhance his or her own body, while incorporating what he or she is capable of (and missing out on what he or she has yet to learn).
  
==Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils and BDSM==
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Sometimes, female dancers wear very loose skirts.  When they twirl round rapidly, these skirts fly out due to centrifugal force, revealing the dancers' [[thigh]]s and even their [[panties]].
 
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The biblical story of Salome and the Dance of the Seven Veils has also been interpreted and represented as having strong psychological undercurrents that anticipate modern notions of [[sadomasochism]] and [[BDSM]] play -- in addition to the more mainstream phenomenon of [[striptease]] as well as [[paraphilia]]s like ephebophilia, [[necrophilia]], and [[incest]].  
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These themes are present in various modern treatments and expansions of the story -- particularly, in the Symbolist paintings of Gustave Moreau, the French Decadent/Symbolist play by Oscar Wilde (which takes great liberties with the original biblical sources, and adds considerable new dimensions of perversion to the story), the accompanying Art Nouveau drawings to the Wilde play by Aubrey Beardsley, and the German opera by Richard Strauss. 
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Strauss's opera, in particular, seems to have inspired a curiously historicized view of the story of Salome as a metaphor for a host of modern social problems and geopolitical-ideological concerns -- such as child abuse, sex-slave trafficking, imperialist/capitalist exploitation of the Third World, and the invasion and occupation of formerly sovereign nations by foreign powers.  The association of Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils with Fascist appeasement and collaboration (intertwined with modern BDSM-fetish iconography) is made quite explicit in Liliana Cavani's film, ''The Night Porter''.
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In addition to ''The Night Porter'', other films which depict the story of Salome with an implied BDSM subtext include Pier Paolo Pasolini's ''The Gospel According to St. Matthew'' and Ken Russell's ''Salome's Last Dance''.
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==External links==
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* [http://www.geocities.com/bretthor_kor/dance.html Dance guides for girls wishing to write their own dances]
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==See also==
 
==See also==
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* [[Ballet]]
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* [[Belly dance]]
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* [[Can-can]]
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* [[Choreophilia]]
 
* [[Dance (clubbing)]]
 
* [[Dance (clubbing)]]
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* [[Dancewear]]
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* [[Gor - Dictionary]]
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* [[Pole dance]]
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[[Category:Other Topics]]

Revision as of 15:40, 20 July 2013

Twirling dancers

Solo slave dances feature in BDSM fiction and form a significant part of the Gor sub-culture and books. Dances are performed by submissives (almost invariably female) for the enjoyment of their masters, and have a strong D/S element to them. An investigation of the Informed consent archives found very few discussions on slave dances, which would suggest that it is not an activity that is performed in the wider BDSM community.

Needless to say, dancing also features in many fetish clubs both as an activity and an entertainment; however, in this context it is no different to dancing in a vanilla club.

Two of the best-known types of solo pleasure dances are the "belly dance" and the "pole dance". Neither has a strict set of moves or sequences, but each has its own focus which an experienced viewer might expect to see. Most pleasure dances are even less formal. Often, the dancer creates his or her own dance to enhance his or her own body, while incorporating what he or she is capable of (and missing out on what he or she has yet to learn).

Sometimes, female dancers wear very loose skirts. When they twirl round rapidly, these skirts fly out due to centrifugal force, revealing the dancers' thighs and even their panties.

See also

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