China's Youth Embrace Street Dance Amid Hip-hop Crackdown
Sumaira FH Published November 19, 2018 | 11:00 AM
In China, where children are often saddled with a packed schedule of extracurricular activities before they even enter grade school, some parents are making room for a surprising pursuit: hip-hop dance classes.
Beijing, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 19th Nov, 2018 ) :In China, where children are often saddled with a packed schedule of extracurricular activities before they even enter grade school, some parents are making room for a surprising pursuit: hip-hop dance classes.
Inside a dance studio in central Beijing, a group of kids bopped up and down to an American hip-hop beat as they mimicked their teacher, a young woman in a dark blue beret and loose clothing.
Some practised in earnest -- bending their arms just so -- while others giggled, treating the class more like play.
"I want my son to be more extroverted. Kids these days lack spunk," explained Liu Li, whose son, a shy four-year-old with a large dimpled smile, just started taking dance classes at the studio, FunkAsista, this year.
It is not uncommon for children as young as three to take English lessons, piano classes and other more traditional after-school activities in China, where the pressure to compete with other students can be all-consuming.
But Liu wanted something different for her son, who often struggles to feel comfortable in group settings.
"I want to encourage him to be more lively and carefree," the 36-year-old told AFP.
Though China's nascent street dance scene took root as early as the 2000s -- thanks in part to Korean boy band H.O.T. -- it wasn't until recently that the style exploded into mainstream culture.
Underground street dancers were thrust into the limelight after a few tv competitions featuring celebrity judges, such as "Street Dance of China", blew up.
Young parents like Liu view the contemporary dance style as a cure for introversion while others see it as a hip form of exercise or even an alternative way of living that embraces self-expression at the expense of traditional social norms.
"All parents want their daughters to be well-behaved and find a stable job, then find a good husband, get married, and have kids," said Ya Xin, a 25-year-old dancer.
Ya moved to Beijing in May to pursue dance full-time, renouncing her 9-to-5 gig at a government bureau in Hebei province. Her parents were not pleased.
"They didn't agree, but I am willing to push back," she said. "They are not payingfor my living expenses, so doing what I want isn't their burden."
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