Central BellyDance School
  • Home
  • Classes
  • About
  • Student Resource Directory
    • Student Reading
    • School Store
    • Practice Music Tips
    • Video Library
  • FAQs
  • Register

About Props: Shamadan

7/15/2025

 
The prop to introduce this week is the shamadan. I enjoy dancing with this one, because of its connection to the awalim and Egyptian folklore (plus I get to show off, lol).

Read More

About Props: Wings

7/15/2025

 
On the "history of props" front, this week it's wings!


Read More

About Props: Fan Veil

7/15/2025

 
Fan veils come from Asian dance, they were added into bellydance in the late 90s/2000s and the best dances usually have some grounding in the source material. Other inspirations include flamenco fans and burlesque. 

Read More

About Props: Sword

7/15/2025

 
This week, it's time to talk about "s" words-- I mean, swords. 

Read More

Shortening a Skirt with a Big Hem

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
If you have a circle skirt, or other very full skirt, you probably, understandably, want to avoid hemming it. There is a lot of fabric there, and it will clearly take a long time to do. The sheer yardage of it will also provide plenty of opportunity to lose pins, or wibble and wooble and end up with an uneven hem. You might even have beading at the bottom, or some other beautiful trim, ruffle, or design that you don't want to interfere with.​

Read More
0 Comments

Prepping a New Costume for Use

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
New costumes are exciting, whether you make them yourself or buy them. Unfortunately you can almost never put a costume on right from the box: even when it has been custom made to your measurements there are some important steps to take before trying to perform in a new costume. This post should help you get a better fit, make your costumes more comfortable (sortta'), keep things in place when you're dancing, and help them last longer. We can't really cover major alterations too much here, those will depend too much on what your specific situation is, and might need a full-on sewing class, depending on your skill level and the situation of your costume. We CAN, however, cover the things you'll need to do to almost every new costume.

Read More
0 Comments

Costuming for a Troupe

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
This post is less about what makes a professional, beginner, or advancing amateur quality costume, and more about the options for unifying a group in different ways. On that first topic, the TLDR is to pay attention to fit and materials quality.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Circle Unit, Class 1

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
I promised short articles each week to give the dance some context. This week: a little about the cultural context of dance. Before it was on stage, bellydance was done to celebrate and pass time together with friends and families. While the specifics of the dance vary from region to region and household to household, men and women dance socially. Back in the day, this might have been with men in one room and women in another. Today, whether or not that segregation is observed really depends on how conservative the family is. Dancing would happen at weddings, birthday parties, saint's days, or just because it was afternoon and TV didn't exist yet. A future link will talk about the origins of the dance as a performance art, but for now, know that Hollywood fantasies about harem girls, or hippie tales of goddess cults, are unsubstantiated. Instead, of an article with further reading on this, enjoy some wholesome instagram posts from Nurjan Boulden.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Circle Unit, Class 2

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
There are many styles of raqs sharki (the Arabic name for bellydance), influenced by changes in politics, technology, and audiences. Each style is a bit like a dialect of a language. What is generally considered more important is a dancer's individual voice. Of course, while someone may have a strong regional accent, we often borrow words, phrases, and expressions from many areas. In the same way, the lines between dance styles are very blurry. Here is an the Lebanese Diva Amani about finding your voice in your dancing.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Circle Unit, Class 3

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
One of the beautiful things about bellydance is it gives a place for women to have community. This piece is from the e-Zine Gilded Serpent written by Artemis about that, and the author sometimes comes to Ithaca to teach workshops on Turkish style.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Circle Unit, Class 4

7/14/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
While bellydance is generally dominated by cis-women, there is a long history of men and gender-queer folks bellydancing as well, both socially and professionally. Although there is a trend, specifically in the competition world, for dancers to chase validation from male teachers and judges that I am opposed to, men and non-binary folks are a welcome part of the community, and there are some amazing performers doing both folklore and raqs sharki.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Undulations Unit, Class 1

7/8/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
The proper names for bellydance are raqs sharki, in Arabic, and dans oryantal, in Turkish. Besides the music and torso focused movement, there are other elements that make it raqs sharki. For example, hula is also primarily movements of the hips and torso, but is a very different dance. Hula has a religious role and is narrative, raqs sharki is abstract and a dance of social enjoyment. Alia Thabit's article talks about some of the essential ingredients in making a dance be raqs. (Now, I love some chipotle "hummus" with avocado and beansprouts, and a good raqs fusion, but we should be honest about what we name things ^_^)

Read More
0 Comments

Level One:Undulations Unit, Class 2

7/8/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
Raqs sharki has, for as long as we know, existed under patriarchy. And if you REALLY want to dive into an academic discussion of how THAT has worked out, click here (I mean it, that is a very extra-credit article, feel free to skip it or save it for later ^_~). For the real reading this week, let's look at the role bellydance can play in healing from patriarchy, particularly our relationships with ourselves and with women. This article is by Yamê.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One:Undulations Unit, Class 3

7/8/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
During the history of gaining respect for raqs sharki/dans oryantale as a family friendly dance there have been efforts to distance it from sensuality and sexuality. In the context of entertaining at weddings, things can actually get quite bawdy! One of the harder things for Euro-Americans to get used to is the idea that the dance itself is family friendly, but there is a stigma against those who perform it. In fighting that stigma, it is important to avoid slut shamming. Reclaiming sexuality can be one of the therapeutic effects of the dance, and it never helps to step on others when trying to lift yourself up. Mark Balahadia has more to say on this


Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Undulations Unit, Class 4

7/8/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
Bellydancers occupy something called a "liminal" space in MENAHT culture. Both an integral part of celebrations, and a profession that is not considered respectable by many parts of society. This can make life hard for professional dancers working in the countries of origin, but is also conveys a certain power that is the subject of this week's reading.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Undulations Unit, Class 5

7/8/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
For the last class of each unit, we cover a different music genre. Today, it's a two-for! Egyptian Shaabi and Marhagan. Shaabi is losely translated as music of the country (nation, not countryside) and the Egyptian flavor really took off with Ahmed Adeweya and the invention of the cassette tape. No longer were Egyptians (especially cabbies) stuck listening to state-censored radio, cassettes could be copied and shared music that spoke to people's struggles was accessible.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Infinities Unit, Class 1

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
Old fantasies had people in the West thinking that raqs sharki (the Arabic name for bellydance) was a dance of seduction, but the actual job of a dancer in MENAHT (Middle Eastern North African, Helene, and Turkish) cultures is much different. While of course some dancers just need to get money from men in the audience (hello patriarchy) the main reason a dancer gets hired is to inspire and spread joy. Alia write about this, in this post of hers. ​

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Infinities Unit, Class 2

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
I want you all to find your own voice. Shems articulates well how all this movement vocabulary fits into learning how to dance and I hope it makes it clearer why I teach things in parts, so you can assemble them in a way that expresses yourself

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Infinities Unit, Class 3

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
I wanted to take a second to talk about some of the ways bellydance can be both physically (TW: gun violence) and psychologically therapeutic, of course it can also be just plain fun ^_^

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Infinities Unit, Class 4

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
Borders drawn by colonizers have contributed a lot to the diaspora from countries in the Levant and beyond. In this week's piece, Roxane touches on the difficulty with transliterating Arabic script into English letters (which is why so many Arabic words have so many different English spellings) and on carrying cultural traditions in the diaspora. One member of the group, who uses a stage name to keep her performing private from her family, said:

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Infinities Unit, Class 5

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
The topic for this unit’s Music genre was going to be folkloric songs, but that is such a broad topic that I think we are better introduced to through the weekly regional highlights, so instead, let’s talk about fusion songs. There is a lot to unpack when it comes to respectful fusion, but the bottom line is to know each dance one wants to fuse thoroughly in their home contexts before creating a blend of them. Because raqs sharki is the music translated into movement, any dance that includes raqs sharki as one of the elements should be to music that also fuses bellydance music with elements of the music that goes with the dance it is being fused with.

This is a handy way to teach your body to distinguish between different dance styles: practice each to the music that they go with. You'll build natural associations so that when you hear a certain kind of music you body will feel like doing the appropriate matching sort of movement.

Read More
0 Comments

Level One: Circle Unit, Class 5

6/16/2025

0 Comments

 
Articles
When I first started, the line between pop music and shaabi music was more clear. Today, many shaabi artists are very popular. You can think of this just like how hip-hop has become more and more mainstream, and more and more pop-hits include elements from shaabi music. In the 60s and 70s, popular music on the radio was often the orchestrated songs we think of as classics. By the 90s stars like Egyptian Amir Diab dominated the charts. Lebanese singer Nancy Ajram and Turkish singer Tarkan were very popular when I first started dancing.

To keep up, I recommend sites like Anghami, the Arabic spotify. But really, the best way might be to ask someone younger ^_^

Read More
0 Comments

How Bellydance History is Like Molecular Physics

6/10/2025

0 Comments

 
Bellydancers have come up with some incredible stories to explain the origins of our dance. And while we can know a lot about the past century, the further back we go, the blurrier the picture gets. We might bemoan the idea that the history is lost to the "mists of time", I propose the following, as a way to create some sense of resolution around this issue.​

You are bound to come across some version of the phrase "bellydance as we know it today", which generally means raqs sharki as it has been performed leading up the golden era and recorded in early Egyptian cinema. This style was popular with the concert halls and it formed from the dances of the awalim and Ottoman court dancers

Read More
0 Comments

The Awalim's Spell

6/10/2025

0 Comments

 
To understand the place of a bellydancer in Egyptian society, there are two helpful things to know about. The Awalim, and the Zeffa.

Read More
0 Comments

Cross Training in MENAHT dances

6/10/2025

0 Comments

 
Why we should explore all of the other bellydance styles and regional folk dances, and why you do not need to study European dances to be a good bellydancer.

(quick note: MENAHT stands for Middle Eastern, North African, Hellenic, and Turkish. I also mix the use of raqs/raks sharki, dans oryantal, Oriental dance, and bellydance in this article).


Read More
0 Comments
<<Previous

    Categories

    All
    Costuming
    Folklore
    History
    Level 1 Reading
    Level 2 Reading
    Music
    Musings And Inspiration
    Must Know Songs
    Performing
    Props
    Styles Of Bellydance
    Tips And Tricks

    Author

    Lisa Lumina is the primary author of student readings. Guest authors are indicated on their posts.

    Archives

    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    September 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • Classes
  • About
  • Student Resource Directory
    • Student Reading
    • School Store
    • Practice Music Tips
    • Video Library
  • FAQs
  • Register