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  2. Dances of Universal Peace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dances_of_Universal_Peace

    Dances and dancing of this kind is seen as opportunity to develop participants' spiritual awareness, hand-eye-body coordination, and competency in harmonizing with others through dance. Many dances are choreographed with movements, steps, and gestures encouraging dancers to explore for deeper mystical meanings of the dance. [6]

  3. Netotiliztli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netotiliztli

    This included Netotiliztli, which had symbolic, spiritual choreography. Netotiliztli, which loosely translates to "expressed by dance," was a communicative dance of worship and rejoice practiced by the Mexica. [6] It was performed by dancers, who could be any member of society, as all members of Nahua society were educated in song and dance.

  4. We Are Climbing Jacob's Ladder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Are_Climbing_Jacob's_Ladder

    This generated two distinctive African American slave musical forms, the spiritual (sung music usually telling a story) and the field holler (sung or chanted music usually involving repetition of the leader's line). [1] We Are Climbing Jacob's Ladder is a spiritual. [1] As a folk song originating in a repressed culture, the song's origins are lost.

  5. The Skeleton Dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Skeleton_Dance

    The short was released on December 4, 2001, on Walt Disney Treasures: Silly Symphonies - The Historic Musical Animated Classics [11] [1] and on December 2, 2002, on Walt Disney Treasures: Mickey Mouse in Black and White. [12] It was included as a bonus feature on the Diamond Edition Blu-ray of 2009 of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. [13]

  6. Sacred dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_dance

    The Balinese Sacred Dance Sanghyang Dedari involves girls being possessed by hyang, Bali, Indonesia. The theologian W. O. E. Oesterley proposed in 1923 that sacred dance had several purposes, the most important being to honour supernatural powers; the other purposes were to "show off" before the powers; to unite the dancer with a supernatural power, as in the dances for the Greek goddesses ...

  7. Ecstatic dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecstatic_dance

    The ecstatic Kouretes dancing around the infant Zeus, depicted by Jane Ellen Harrison, 1912. Little is known directly of ecstatic dance in ancient times. However, Greek mythology does have several stories of the Maenads; the maenads were intoxicated female worshippers of the Greek god of wine, Dionysus, known for their "ecstatic revelations and frenzied dancing".

  8. Apache Crown Dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Crown_Dance

    Apache Crown Dance or Gaan Dance (also called Mountain Spirit, Crown Dance, Devil Dance) is an Apache ceremonial dance that is intended to protect the community from disease and enemies. Dancers became "the embodiment of the Mountain Spirits (the Gaan)"; they wear special masks and wands during the dance.

  9. Worship dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worship_dance

    Some liturgical dance was common in ancient times or non-Western settings, with precedents in Judaism beginning with accounts of dancing in the Old Testament.An example is the episode when King David danced before the Ark of the Covenant (), but this instance is often considered to be outside of Jewish norms and Rabbinic rituals prescribed at the time.