ThenDoBetter Grant winner: Safiya Kamaria Kinshasa, Reclaiming the Dance

I’ve awarded a ThenDoBetter grant to Safiya Kamaria Kinshasa.

She writes:

Reclaiming The Dance

In 2017 poetry became my obsession, I wanted to learn as much as possible but due to my disability and neurodiversity (autism, ADHD, dyslexia & LPD) I found poetry quite challenging which often left me feeling disheartened, nonetheless I persevered and forged my own path. One evening in 2018 I decided to explore poems dancing to Janelle Monáe and Jill Scott in the corner of my bedroom. I felt liberated - I began to see poetic form as choreography, my work dramatically improved. Dance became essential to my practice, not only has it enabled me to access language in a unique way, but I recently I discovered the combination of dance and poetry could help me reclaim ancestral voices.

There are no known first-handwritten accounts/ biographies of enslaved women from the African diaspora in Barbados during The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, all documentation on the cultures, artistic expressions and behaviours of enslaved Africans and descendants were collated by colonialists and often vulgarised and associated with obeah (“witchcraft”). These depictions assisted in the cultivation of the colonial imagination of Black women which continues to permeate popular culture, despite numerous efforts to counteract stereotypical narratives. However, there are historical first-hand descriptions of their movements documented by the European colonists. Dance, movement & gestures are also forms of language and by using these notes (navigating the racism) transforming the movement into poetry for my first poetry collection. The poetry collection will also include a dance score.

This is the beginning of a life-long project, and I will be using this grant to work with a choreologist to help with the notation arrangement. Labanotation is a form of documenting dance; however, I want to present the notation in a way which best expresses my discoveries. Therefore, this grant will assist help me to produce the best arrangements whilst respecting the craft.

Who am I?

My name is Safiya Kamaria Kinshasa and I am an interdisciplinary poet, who chiefly uses dance to write poems. I have been dancing since I was 14 and got BA in Cultural Studies & a MA in Dance Cultures. I always wanted to combine dance, history and cultural theory and when I found poetry it felt like the missing link. I am a British born Barbadian raised lady who thinks a little differently, but I prefer to just call the way my brain works as a kind of superpower. I have won a bunch of national spoken word awards, been shortlisted for things and I’m an Obsidian fellow and an Apples & Snakes Poetry in Performance Recipient. My collection will be published in 2022 by Out-Spoken Press – name TBA soon.

Her Twitter is here.

Viral Dances, weakly inefficient markets in everything

-Viral Dance Markets

-the Trade-Offs in intellectual property protection 

-Cultural bits 

I’m not a tik-tok user or a consumer of short form video. I can observe that for 10s of 

millions maybe 100s of millions it’s an important cultural bit.

I was fascinated to learn how these dances are created, how they go viral and the difficulty in gaining creative credit.

I typically think copyright is too long (and I’m mixed on patents, some patents could be longer (pharmaceutical), some shorter (some software) ) but I can see how the informal ways of sharing creative credit can also be tricky. Then again the lack of copyright over dance moves allows (perhaps) them to innovate and circulate faster. 

The 10 second dance of Renegade is noticeable to me for its moderate difficulty as well as the way it has gone viral.  Videos below.  

Still despite the difficulties it looks like the creator of Renegade (Jalaiah Harmon, 14) at least has managed to crystallise some value (maybe lots of value) from her dance so it is not a complete market failure. Dance creators instinctively seem to know that moves don’t achieve mass scaling without well-followed personalities copying them. (NYT article, link end) 

The under current of “dub smash” culture being subsumed by “suburban” I can partly see but it seems to me to be part of the “subculture” going “mainstream” tensions.  In the UK, grime music was big amongst many before it hit mainstream recognition. 

Still she created a dance which has been viewed by millions and copies by many, and understood by followers of dance cultural bits and maybe very few others. There’s a cultural richness there that she couldn’t have tapped into except quite recently. While standard bearers for historic and traditional purveyors of culture and often perplexed (cf Instagram poets) I think perhaps they’ve missed a part of how younger generations enjoy and access cultural bits. 

If anything, I think humanity is culturally richer the more thriving subcultures we have. Long live viral short form dance. 


H/T Ted Giaoa for influencing my thinking on music (and its radicalism and importance to culture). Check out his recent book on Music: A subversive history.

Tyler Cowen for seeing markets in everything. Also see his book Infovore on cultural bits (and autism).

Alex Bedward for discussion in size of Grime markets. 

NYT article here charting renegade: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/13/style/the-original-renegade.html

Insta-poets: short blog here.