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  2. Fancy dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fancy_dance

    Women's fancy dancing declined in the 1950s, but in the 1960s and 1970s, the dance came back as the women's fancy shawl dance. [8] Despite its name, derived from an African language, the Gombey dancers of Bermuda appear to owe more to Algonquian traditions, thanks to hundreds of Native Americans sent to Bermuda as slaves during the Seventeenth ...

  3. Powwow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powwow

    Fancy Shawl: A dance featuring women wearing brilliant colors, a long, usually fringed and decorated, shawl, performing rapid spins and elaborate dance steps. Jingle Dress (healing dance): The jingle dress includes a skirt with hundreds of small tin cones that make noise as the dancer moves with light footwork danced close to the ground.

  4. American Indian Dance Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Indian_Dance_Theatre

    Includes Plains Indians' hoop, eagle, and Apache Crown Dances, the Zuni rainbow dance, powwow dances (grass, men's traditional and fancy, women's fancy shawl), and Plains snake and buffalo dances. American Indian Dance Theater (1996). Dances for the New Generations. Produced in 1993 for PBS Great Performances/Dance in America.

  5. Manila shawl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manila_shawl

    The Manila shawl is also used by female flamenco dancers during their dance, as it is a great dance enhancer and adds drama when the flamenco dancer twirls it around her body and in the air. Sara Baras and Maria Pages are two of the most best flamenco dancers in Spain and they are experts in twirling their shawls during the dance. Famous ...

  6. Shawl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shawl

    Silk shawls with fringes, made in China, were available by the first decade of the 19th century. Ones with embroidery and fringes were available in Europe and the Americas by 1820. These were called China crêpe shawls or China shawls, and in Spain mantones de Manila because they were shipped to Spain from China via the port of Manila. The ...

  7. Jingle dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingle_dress

    An Ojibwe jingle dress in the Wisconsin Historical Museum. Jingle dress is a First Nations and Native American women's pow wow regalia and dance. North Central College associate professor Matthew Krystal notes, in his book, Indigenous Dance and Dancing Indian: Contested Representation in the Global Era, that "Whereas men's styles offer Grass Dance as a healing themed dance, women may select ...

  8. Talk:Fancy dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Fancy_dance

    It also doesn't help with the fact that a Wikipedia article with this title will bias the search engines to regard fancy dance as this. In my honest, humble little opinion, I think it would be better to subdivide the page, and use the longer names of the "dances" for the men's and women's "fancy dance," Native American Fancy Shawl Dance and ...

  9. Gourd Dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gourd_Dance

    The Gourd Dance originated with the Kiowa tribe, and is a man's dance. Women participate by dancing in place behind their male counterparts and outside the perimeter formed by the men. The dance in the Kiowa Language is called "Ti-ah pi-ah" which means "ready to go, ready to die".