Record ID | marc_records_scriblio_net/part03.dat:146585844:1390 |
Source | Scriblio |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_records_scriblio_net/part03.dat:146585844:1390?format=raw |
LEADER: 01390cam 22002291 4500
001 43039942
003 DLC
005 20031107090823.0
007 cr |||||||||||
008 781018s1847 ohu 000 0 eng
010 $a 43039942
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC
050 00 $aGV1741$b.R5
100 1 $aRice, N. L.$q(Nathan Lewis),$d1807-1877.
245 12 $aA discourse on dancing,$bdelivered in the Central Presbyterian Church, Cincinnati.$cBy N. L. Rice.
260 $aCincinnati,$bFor sale at the The Presbyterian Book Depository, and W. H. Moore,$c1847.
300 $a24 p.$c22 cm.
520 $aThis book is typical of mid-nineteenth century antidance works. While many writers noted that the Bible contains numerous references to dance, Rice (1807-1877) points out that, in a biblical context, dance was utilized as a part of worship, performed exclusively by women dancing with each other. (The dangers of contact between the sexes while dancing were a common theme in antidance literature.) The second point, also common in antidance books, centered on the notion that dancing was bad for the health, especially in women.
530 $aAvailable also through the Library of Congress Web site as facsimile page images and full text.
650 0 $aDance$xReligious aspects$xChristianity.
650 4 $aAntidance Literature.
856 41 $dmusdi$f145$uhttp://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/musdi.145$qs