[] this nuanced and well-researched study demonstrates the merits of using popular dance as a gateway into British social and cultural history.
Laura Quinton, New York University, Twentieth Century British History, 2018
'Drawing upon a fascinating range of source material (including autobiographies, Mass Observation, and the trade press), she tackles a series of complex issues, and advances a number of intriguing, important, and convincing arguments.'
Canadian Journal of History
'Dancing in the English Style breaks new ground in many areas [and] is a detailed, well-written, and comprehensive account of its subject.'
Journal of British Studies
'The books value lies in its emphasis on the commercialization of dance during the period and its connection to national identity something hitherto not explored in any real depth. These discussions of national identity and its link to commercialism will interest scholars from a wide variety of fields, and hopefully serve to spark different perspectives on this under-researched area. The book therefore serves as vital reading for scholars of dance and twentieth-century Britain more broadly, but also those interested the variety of ways national identity can be constructed and performed.'
Journal of Contemporary History
Introduction
1 Dancing mad! The modernisation of popular dance
2 Who makes new dances? The dance profession and the evolution of style
3 At the palais: the dance hall industry and the standardisation of experience
4 The dance evil: gender, sexuality and the representation of popular dance
5 English style: foreign culture, race and the Anglicisation of popular dance
6 Doing the Lambeth Walk: novelty dances and the commodification of the nation
7 Dancing democracy in wartime Britain
8 The infernal jitterbug and the transformation of popular dance
Epilogue: Come dancing: popular dance in post-war Britain
Select bibliography
Index