Stepping at the 7th Annual Zeta Yard Show (UW-Madison)
Submitted by Deonte Harris on September 9, 2013 - 2:15pm
Stepping, as it is known and practiced today, was developed by members of the “Divine Nine” National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) on college campuses across the United States. It was within the black collegiate experience that the legacy of stepping came to fruition and has been maintained and transmitted through the years as an oral tradition. The nine fraternities and sororities that make up the body of NPHC are: Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. (1906); Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. (1908); Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. (1911); Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. (1911); Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. (1913); Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. (1914); Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. (1920); Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. (1922); and Iota Phi Theta Fraternity, Inc. (1963).
The practice of stepping itself can best be described as a series of highly physical, multilayered routines that typically involves a group of individuals stomping, clapping, patting, singing, and chanting in a synchronized manner.
This brief sound clip from the 2013
Zeta Yard Show reinforces certain organizational identity markers
through singing, chanting, and stepping by Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority,
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, and Kappa Alpha Psi
Fraternity.
The Zeta Yard Show took place on Saturday, May 11, 2013 in 3650 Humanities (a university lecture hall located in the central part of the UW campus). The event was completely free and open to public. Those in attendance totaled about 300 persons, and consisted of mostly university students, alumni, Greeks from the NPHC and Multi-Cultural Greek Council, and a host of supportive friends and family. One of the unique things about the Zeta Yard Show, however, is that the event is about more than just stepping; it functions to promote Greek unity and serves as an “opportunity for fraternities and sororities to showcase their organization’s mission, principles, pay homage to their founders, and to inform the campus about any service they do in the community” (Jo’Niece Monk, member of the Eta Iota chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.). In terms of how the event is organized, “it is put together by organizations selecting steps, calls, chants, and strolls that represent their organization and local chapter” [italics added] (ibid.).
During the first half of the Zeta Yard Show, the participating organizations performed routines of self-representation through songs, strolls (choreographed line dances set to music), chants, and a series of steps, all of which represented their respective fraternity or sorority. For the second half of the show, each performing group was asked to step as a different organization within the NPHC. This resulted in the female sororities performing as male fraternities, and vice-versa. In order to perform the identity of another group, the steppers would change into the colors of that fraternity or sorority, as well as perform a few of the signature step routines that represent the “swapped” organization. This swapping of colors and routines is commonly known as a “Flip-Flip Show” or, in the case of the 2013 Zeta Yard Show, a “Switch-A-Roo Show.” The following pictures illustrate performances of self-representation and the “Switch-A-Roo.”
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity self-representation
Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity as Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority self-representation
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority as Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity
As an entity, the Zeta Yard Show is a creative, social process that consists of strategically choreographed routines and antics that display organizational distinction as well as black Greek unity. Both distinction and unity are achieved through this production by creating a performance space through which black Greeks can engage in self-expression and learn from the other NPHC organizations through exchange and interaction. The result of these things is the formation of an interactive environment between steppers and audience that entertains while it educates.
"Performing Identity" at the 2013 Zeta Yard Show (UW-Madison)
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