Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Contemporary Cuba - book

Yvonne Daniel | 1995 | Indiana University Press | English

The definitive academic study of rumba as a living practice in Cuba — essential reading for any dancer who wants to understand the Afro-Cuban movement vocabulary that underlies timba"> timba, casino, and all Cuban popular dance.

What It Covers

Yvonne Daniel is both a scholar and a dancer who lived and studied in Cuba extensively. Her book documents rumba — guaguancĂł, columbia, and yambĂș — not as a historical artifact but as a living social practice in the solares (tenement courtyards) and community gatherings of Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas.

She covers:

  • The three rumba styles in depth: their movement vocabulary, musical structure, and social meanings
  • The vacunao and botao (the pursuit-and-evasion dynamic of guaguancĂł) as a social and cultural phenomenon, not just a dance step
  • The relationship between rumba and Afro-Cuban religious traditions (SanterĂ­a, AbakuĂĄ)
  • How rumba functions as cultural memory — a way of preserving African identity through the body
  • The social and political context of rumba in revolutionary Cuba

Why Dancers Should Read It

Timba dance — particularly despelote and the Afro-Cuban body vocabulary — is rumba translated into the popular dance context. The isolation work, the grounding, the improvisational call-and-response with the percussion, the social play between dancers: all of it has its roots in rumba.

Reading Daniel's book gives you the deep background for movements you may already be learning. Understanding why the body moves the way it does in Cuban dance — what historical and cultural forces shaped it — changes how you dance. You stop executing technique and start expressing something real.

About the Author

Yvonne Daniel is a professor of dance and Afro-American studies. Her research involved years of fieldwork in Cuba, studying with master rumba dancers and musicians. The book is academic but written accessibly — readable by any motivated dancer, not just scholars.