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by YeGoblynQueenne
782 days ago
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>> It’s a bit like a man not realizing he might be a great dancer, simply because most dancers are women, and so he never explores the question. No offense but that stereotype is incomprehensible. Outside of gay and lesbian clubs, [roughly} half of all dancers are men and the other half women. I suspect you are specifically talking about ballet dancers, but those are a tiny minority, and don't even exist in most of the world. Here's a really cool dude dancing a really cool dance for men (Zaouli, from Cote d' Ivoire): https://youtu.be/jZ572yLH9sc?si=xH4tOaqlfrGYQJiw |
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There's room for "dancer" to mean "person who is actively dancing", e.g. "Jim is a great dancer, but I am not". But I've never heard someone say "I'm a dancer" to simply mean "I dance [at all]". Its technically correct to say "I'm not a dancer", but most people say "I don't/can't dance".
In the States, you'll find that the gender ratio in the average dance class (ballet, tap, jazz, hiphop, etc) is strongly skewed toward girls and women. You see similar ratios in college dance degree programs.
If you pursue professional training to dance, odds are you're a woman.