Finding her flow
In her two-and-a-half years at Temple, Jordan hustled nonstop. Temple awarded Jordan a number of scholarships, including the Vice Provost Scholarship and the Sarah Hilsendager Dance Education Scholarship.
She dove deep into the arts community, jumping at opportunities like working alongside Kimmika Williams-Witherspoon, associate professor of theater studies and playwriting, on Safe to Brave, a play inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement. Williams-Witherspoon’s collaborative leadership style and mentorship had a powerful effect on Jordan.
“Temple helped break my boundaries of what I thought dance could be,” she said.
The pinnacle of Jordan’s Temple experiences was her master’s thesis, a three-part performance titled, Pissed: An Ode to the Black Woman Warrior. The piece, which addressed the stereotype of the angry Black woman, featured dancers of all different skin tones and body shapes, and included rhythmic dance, singing, spoken word poetry and drumming.
“Overlapping oppression does make you angry! So I wanted to look at, how do you move about the world with this anger but still participate in joy?” Jordan said. “It was the biggest project that I’d done at that point.”