Difference between revisions 137982370 and 137982371 on dewiki

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[[Image:120844215 b137f7aba5 o.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A girl [[hip hop dance|hip hop dancing]], a very broad and common category of street dance.]]

Street dance is also called vernacular dance (Jazz Dance) The Story of American Vernacular Dance",by Marshall Winslow Stearns, Jean Stearns, 1994, ISBN 0306805537 </ref>  is an umbrella term, used to describe [[dance]] styles that evolved outside of [[dance studio]]s in everyday spaces such as [[street]]s, [[school]] yards and [[nightclub]]s. They are often improvisational and social dance in nature, encouraging interaction and contact with the spectators and the other dancers.

Street dance is also commonly used specifically for the many hip hop. Street dance is also called  vernacular dance (jazz dance). They are often improvisational and social dance in nature, encouraging interaction and contact with the spectators and the other dancers. Some schools use street dance as a form of physical education. 
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                                                                                                        [[funk dance|funk]] [[List of dance style categories|dance styles]] that began appearing in the [[United States]] in the 1970s, and are still alive and evolving within [[hip hop culture]] today: such as [[breakdance]], [[popping]], [[Locking (dance)|locking]], [[hip hop dance#New school.2Fnew style|hip hop new style]] and [[house dance]]. These dances are popular on levels, as a form of [[physical exerc(contracted; show full)[[Category:Street dance]]

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