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Highbrow/Lowdown: Theater, Jazz, and the Making of the New Middle Class [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 21 B&W photographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Apr-2009
  • Kirjastus: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472116924
  • ISBN-13: 9780472116928
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 336 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 21 B&W photographs
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Apr-2009
  • Kirjastus: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472116924
  • ISBN-13: 9780472116928
Teised raamatud teemal:
Highbrow/Lowdown explores the twentieth centurys first culture war and the forces that permanently transformed American theater into the art form we know today. The arrival of jazz in the 1920s sparked a cultural revolution that was impossible to contain. The music affected every stratum of U.S. society and culture, confusing and challenging long-entrenched hierarchies based on class, race, and ethnicity. Jazz was considered the first distinctively American art form, and its dissemination across the globe served to launch the United States as a cultural force to be reckoned with. The Jazz Age was also the era of vaudeville, burlesque, and musical comedy, popular entertainments that were quick to cash in on the jazz craze. But jazz was much more than the music. It was also a powerful cultural force that brought African American, Jewish, and working-class culture into the white Protestant mainstream. When the influence of jazz spread to legitimate theater, playwrights, producers, and critics rushed to distinguish the newly emerging literary theater from its illegitimate cousins. The efforts to defeat the democratizing influences of jazz and to canonize playwrights like Eugene ONeill triumphed, giving birth to American theater as we know it today. David Savran is Distinguished Professor of Theatre and Vera Mowry Roberts Chair in American Theatre at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.  An important book that raises crucial questions about how and why a literary art theatre came to be seen among tastemakers and canonizers as legitimate. Savran makes the persuasive argument that jazz needed to be defeated in order for the art theatre to take center stage, using an impressive variety of tools to make his case.   ---Andrea Most, University of TorontoLike a canny fight promoter in the perennial American culture wars, David Savran puts the reader ringside for a blow-by-blow account of the Battle of the Brows---high, middle, and low. Setting Jazz Age entertainments at one another, with legitimate theater duking it out with nightclub revues and movies pummeling vaudeville, Highbrow/Lowdown tracks the rise of heavyweight Eugene ONeill to the top of the card, but it also makes heroes of the referees---the drama critics and audiences who crowned the winners. This is performance history as an innovative political economy of culture, and its a knockout.---Joseph Roach, Yale UniversityA stunningly original analysis of music and theater in the 1920s as inseparable faces of jazz. Savran grounds his social history on a huge array of primary sources while drawing, without fanfare or jargon, on theorists such as Adorno and Bourdieu. His musical analyses of Gershwin, John Alden Carpenter, and George Antheil are not just first class but pathbreaking. No student of jazz as a Western cultural phenomenon---or of any American music or theater in the 1920s---will dare miss this powerfully illuminating, unabashedly reliable, beautifully written book.---Rose Rosengard Subotnik, Brown University The culture clash that permanently changed American theater

Arvustused

Honorable Mention: American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR) 2010 Barnard Hewitt Award * ASTR Barnard Hewitt Award * "Like a canny fight promoter in the perennial American culture wars, David Savran puts the reader ringside for a blow-by-blow account of the Battle of the Brows--high, middle, and low. Setting Jazz Age entertainments at one another, with 'legitimate theater' duking it out with nightclub revues and movies pummeling vaudeville, Highbrow/Lowdown tracks the rise of heavy-weight Eugene O'Neill to the top of the card, but it also makes heroes of the referees--the drama critics and audiences who crowned the winners. This is performance history as an innovative 'political economy of culture,' and it's a knock-out." Joseph Roach, Sterling Professor of Theater, Yale University -- Joseph Roach Winner: New York University (NYU) 2010 Joe A. Callaway Prize for Best Book in Drama or Theatre -- 2010 Joe A. Callaway Award * NYU Joe A. Callaway Prize * "Impressive in depth as well as breadth, Highbrow/Lowbrow rewrites 20th-centure theatre history." Shane Vogel, Indiana University, The Drama Review -- Shane Vogel * The Drama Review * "David Savran's thought-provoking book will cause scholars to reconceptualize American culture during the Jazz Age... Highbrow/Lowdown demonstrates the centrality of jazz as arbiter of class and taste in the formation of early twentieth-centry American culture." --Katie N. Johnson, American Studies -- Katie N. Johnson * American Studies * "Savran treats an enormous range of ideas with virtuosic confidence. ... Everyone interested in twentieth-century American music culture can learn from Savrans boundary-crossing book. His perspective from outside the connes of music scholarship brings fresh insights to our understanding of the cultural contests at work on multiple levels of society, and especially to those being enacted on stage." ---Journal of Society for American Music * Journal of Society for American Music *

David Savran is Distinguished Professor of Theatre and Vera Mowry Roberts Chair in American Theatre, Graduate Center, City University of New York.