Authors: Krin Gabbard (Editor), Bernard L. Gendron (Contribution by), Steven B. Elworth (Contribution by), Nathaniel Mackey (Contribution by), Burton W. Peretti
ISBN-13: 9780822315964, ISBN-10: 0822315963
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Date Published: January 1995
Edition: New Edition
Krin Gabbard is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at the State University of New York, Stony Brook. He is the editor of the companion volume, Representing Jazz, also published by Duke University Press.
The study of jazz comes of age with this anthology. One of the first books to consider jazz outside of established critical modes, Jazz Among the Discourses brings together scholars from an array of disciplines to question and revise conventional methods of writing and thinking about jazz.
Challenging "official jazz histories," the contributors to this volume view jazz through the lenses of comparative literature; African American studies; music, film, and communication theory; English literature; American studies; history; and philosophy. With uncommon rigor and imagination, their essays probe the influence of various discourses—journalism, scholarship, politics, oral history, and entertainment—on writing about jazz. Employing modes of criticism and theory that have transformed study in the humanities, they address questions seldom if ever raised in jazz writing: What are the implications of building jazz history around the medium of the phonograph record? Why did jazz writers first make the claim that jazz is an art? How is an African American aesthetic articulated through the music? What are the consequences of the interaction between the critic and the jazz artist? How does the improvising artist navigate between chaos and discipline?
Along with its companion volume, Representing Jazz, this versatile anthology marks the arrival of jazz studies as a mature, intellectually independent discipline. Its rethinking of conventional jazz discourse will further strengthen the position of jazz studies within the academy.
Contributors. John Corbett, Steven B. Elworth, Krin Gabbard, Bernard Gendron, William Howland Kenney, Eric Lott, Nathaniel Mackey, Burton Peretti, Ronald M. Radano, Jed Rasula, Lorenzo Thomas, Robert Walser
Both anthologies will provide valuable material for the serious student of jazz. . . . And the average reader with an interest in jazz will find some stimulating reading here.
Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction: The Jazz Canon and Its Consequences | 1 | |
"Moldy Figs" and Modernists: Jazz at War (1942-1946) | 31 | |
Jazz in Crisis, 1948-1958: Ideology and Representation | 57 | |
Other: From Noun to Verb | 76 | |
Historical Context and the Definition of Jazz: Putting More of the History in "Jazz History" | 100 | |
Oral Histories of Jazz Musicians: The NEA Transcripts as Texts in Context | 117 | |
The Media of Memory: The Seductive Menace of Records in Jazz History | 134 | |
"Out of Notes": Signification, Interpretation, and the Problem of Miles Davis | 165 | |
Critical Alchemy: Anthony Braxton and the Imagined Tradition | 189 | |
Ephemera Underscored: Writing Around Free Improvisation | 217 | |
Double V, Double-Time: Bebop's Politics of Style | 243 | |
Ascension: Music and the Black Arts Movement | 256 | |
Contributors | 275 | |
Index | 277 |