The “Dance with Daggers” as an Ethno-Marker of Adyghe Culture

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu15.2021.103

Abstract

This article reviews the history, semantic scope and meaning of the “dance with daggers”, which has survived today as a solo male stage number. The dance is becoming a very important part of academic dance concerts in the North Caucasus, and at the same time dancers with daggers are invited to traditional weddings and corporate parties. Сamechas (kъамэчIас) are identified as military sports and exercises, while also being a modern dance concert number with the same name. The military sport, circus and dance characteristics of this action are revealed in the article. It is proved that the dance is based on the demonstration of military merits, such as the ability to handle sharp knives freely and easily, to throw them at a target, to overcome any obstacles through high jumps, to keep a visible space in sight, to control the body gracefully and to conquer physical pain. In the history of the development of the dance, a multilayered literary text is formed that has mythological and ethno-informational codes. The meaning of using twelve daggers and a papakha (sheepskin hat), symbolizing intellect/reason and equal to any Caucasian man’s head is revealed. The movements on toes allowing one to “rise”, to be close to the gods and to conform to the contours of the mountain landscape, are comparable to the fine graceful movements of mountain animals using any stone or mound as support. Jumping, whirling, lunging, and manipulating with a large number of daggers are considered as signs that reveal deep ethnic values. The choreographic and musical component of the dance is analyzed as well as tricks that are included in the plot of the dance, allowing the performer to demonstrate traditional hand positions, certain steps, jump height, spin speed. The Western Adyghes have formed a stable musical composition for the “dance with daggers”, which consists of three tunes: “Dzherakai Zafak”, “Kabardinka” and an Ossetian melody arranged by the famous Adyghe accordionist Kim Tletseruk. “Gathering” music also symbolically represents the “dance with daggers” as a product and artistic practice of the entire Caucasus.

Keywords:

dance with daggers, dancing tricks, Caucasian dances, solo male dance, къамэчIа

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
 

Author Biography

Alla N. Sokolova , Adyghe State University

Dr. Habil. in Arts, Professor

References

References

1. Beshkok, Maskhud. Adyghe Folklore Dance. Maikop: Adygeiskoe otdelenie Krasnodarskogo knizhnogo izdatel’stva Publ., 1982. (In Russian)

2. Nagaitseva, Liudmila. Adyghe Folk Dances. Nal’chik: El’brus Publ., 1986. (In Russian)

3. Shu, Shaban. Folk Dances of Adyghes. Nal’chik: El’brus Publ., 1992. (In Russian)

4. Kesheva, Zarema. “Dance and Song-Music Culture of the Kabardins in the Second Half of the 20th Century”. Abstract of PhD diss., Institut gumanitarnykh issledovanii Pravitel’stva KBR i KBNTs RAN Publ., 2004. (In Russian)

5. Kesheva, Zarema, and Natal’ia Varivoda. “Cherkes (Adyghe) Dance-Competition: Ethnographic Review”. Sovremennye problemy nauki i obrazovaniia, no. 2–2 (2015): 643. (In Russian)

6. Sokolova, Alla. “The Circumpontic Lezginka Dance as a Cultural Phenomenon”. In Turkic Soundscapes: From Shamanic Voices to Hip-Hop, eds Razia Sultanova and Megan Rancier, 153–62. London: Routledge, 2018. (SOAS Studies in Music).

7. Vitsen, Nikolai. “North and East Tataria or a Condensed Essay of Several Countries and Peoples”. In Adygi, balkartsy i karachaevtsy v izvestiiakh evropeiskikh avtorov XIII–XIX vv., ed. and comp. by V.Gardanov, 86–98. Nal’chik: El’brus Publ., 1974. Accessed July 07, 2020. http://www.vostlit.info/Texts/rus5/Vitsen/otryv3.phtml?id=7072. (In Russian)

8. Svin’in, Pavel. Paintings of Russia and the Life of Its Diverse Peoples: From the Travels of P.P. Svinyin. St. Petersburg: tipografiia N.Grecha Publ., 1839, pt. 1. (In Russian)

9. Blaramberg, Iogann. Historical, Topographical, Statistical, Ethnographic and Military Description of the Caucasus. Transl., foreword and comment. by I.Nazarova. Nal’chik: El’-Fa Publ., 1999. (In Russian)

10. Bell, Dzheims. Diary of a Stay in Cherkessia During 1837–1839. Transl. by K.Mal’bakhov. 2 vols. Nal’chik: El’-Fa Publ., 2007. (In Russian)

11. Khan-Girei, Sultan. Cherkes Legends: Selected Works. Nal’chik: El’brus Publ., 1989. (In Russian)

12. Dubrovin, Nikolai. Cherkesy (Adygea). Nal’chik: Kabardino-Balkarskoe otdelenie Vserossiiskogo fonda kul’tury Publ., 1992. (Materialy dlia istorii cherkesskogo naroda, iss. 1). (In Russian)

13. Autlev, Dzhambulat. “The Caucasian Dagger ‘Kama’ is a Legendary Cold Weapon”. Bivak. Accessed July 07, 2020. https://www.bivouac.ru/2015/07/holodnoe-orugie-kavkaza-kingal-kama.html. (In Russian)

14. Sokolova, Alla. “Adyghe Agonism”. Vestnik Adygeiskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Seriia 2: Filologiia i iskusstvovedenie, iss. 3/63 (2010): 210–6. (In Russian)

15. Nartha. Adyghe Epic. Systematization, comp., foreword and comment. by Asker Kh’edeg’elIe. 7 vols. Maikop: Adygskii NII Publ., 1970, vol. 3. (Adyge IoryIote pamiatnikkher). (In Russian)

16. Sokolova, Alla. Adyghe Harmonica in the Context of Ethnic Musical Culture. Maikop: Kachestvo Publ., 2004. (In Russian)

17. Gatsolaeva, Zareta. “If You are a Man and Wear a Hat…”. In Moda i dizain: istoricheskii opyt — novye tekhnologii. Materialy 8-i mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii, Sankt-Peterburg, 4–7 iiulia 2005 g., eds Natal’ia Kalashnikova et al., 229–33. St. Petersburg: SPGUTD Publ., 2005. (In Russian)

18. Salbiev, Tamerlan. Sacred Marriage. Mythology and Traditional Ossetian Choreography. 2nd ed. Vladikavkaz: SOIGSI Publ., 2017. (In Russian)

19. Kudaev, Mukhtar. Ancient Dances of Balkars and Karachayevs. Nal’chik: El’brus Publ., 1997. (In Russian)

20. Osintseva, Nadezhda. "Dance in the Aspect of Anthropological Ontology". Abstract of PhD diss., Tiumenskii gosudarstvennyi institut iskusstv i kul’tury Publ., 2006. (In Russian)

Downloads

Published

2021-03-24

How to Cite

Sokolova , A. N. (2021). The “Dance with Daggers” as an Ethno-Marker of Adyghe Culture. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Arts, 11(1), 39–55. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu15.2021.103

Issue

Section

Music