Long a symbol of American culture, the banjo actually originated in Africa and was later adopted by European-Americans. In this book Karen Linn shows how the banjo - despite design innovations and several modernizing agendas - has failed to escape its image as a ''half-barbaric'' instrument symbolic of antimodernism and sentimentalism. Caught in the morass of American racial attitudes and often used to express ambivalence toward modern industrial society, the banjo stood in opposition to the ''official'' values of rationalism, modernism, and belief in the beneficence of material progress. Linn uses popular literature, visual arts, advertisements, film, performance practices, instrument construction and decoration, and song lyrics to illustrate how notions about the banjo have changed. Her text traces the instrument from its African origins through the 1980s, alternating between themes of urban modernization and rural nostalgia. She examines the banjo fad of bourgeois Northerners during the late nineteenth century, African-American banjo tradition and the commercially popular cultural image of the southern black banjo player, the banjo in ragtime and early jazz, and the white Southerner and mountaineer as banjo player.''Well written and well researched; Linn has amassed an impressive amount of data, and she uses it effectively. . . . This is an excellent book that should be of interest to not only historians, folklorists, and musicologists but also the banjo player and the general reader.''--Charlie Seemann, Journal of Southern History ''An absolute must read for anyone interested in the banjo.''--Five Stringer ''Concise, well-supported, and provocative. . . . The clearest voice of revelation regarding American's most misunderstood instrument.''--Bob Fulcher, Journal of Country Music ''An intriguing analysis of the role of the banjo in recent American culture and society. . . . Highly recommended.''--R. D. Cohen, Choice ''Uses everything from sentimental novels and escaped slave posters to Felix the Cat cartoons and magazine advertisements to create impressive cultural history of what the author calls the 'idea of the banjo.' . . . Linn's wonderful book is scholarly without being jargoned, serious without being tedious. . . . A book for dipping into, underlining, reading aloud in snatches, and opening repeatedly.''--Rachel Rubin, Banjo Newsletter
Revealing how music mediates both the ideology and the lived experience of race, Hidden in the Mix challenges the status of country music as "the white man’s blues." Contributors.
Two days later, Atlanta police arrested Leo M. Frank, the twentynine-year-old Jewish, Brooklyn-born superintendent of the firm, and charged him with the murder of his ... according to eminent southern historian C. Vann Woodward, “for •58.
Collects the essays that examine the effects of music and its ability to provoke or intensify fear in the genre of horror film, address the presence of music in horror films and their potency within them, and delve into the films like "The ...
Its half-barbaric twang is in harmony with the unmechanical melodies of the birds.”15 Here—and for more than a century since—the banjo's sound is equated with the term twang and is pushed out into the country, reflective of some ...
Providing a sense of rootedness, solidarity, and consolation, banjo picking became an essential part of black plantation life, and its unmistakable sound remains versatile and enduring today, Laurent Dubois shows.
Pennsylvania Gazette , 7 July 1749 , 2 Cullen Rath , “ African Music in Seventeenth- November 1749 , and 17 November 1757 . Century Jamaica : Cultural Transit and 14. South Carolina and American General Transition , ” William and Mary ...
Harvard University Press, 1999), Richard Leppert, Music and Image: Domesticity, Ideology, and Sociocultural Formation in Eighteenth-Century England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), Karen Linn, That Half-Barbaric Twang ...
You'll want to collect them all. This Omnibus E-Book brings together for the first time the first 10 books published in the series.
Woolf Virginia. 'Character in Fiction'. In McNeillie A. (ed.) The Essays of Virginia Woolf, Vol. 3: 1919-1924. London: Hogarth Press, 1988, pp. 420–438. Woolf Virginia. 'Middlebrow'. The Death of the Moth and Other Essays.
Cohen and Cohen, ''Folk and Hillbilly Music,'' 53; Linn (That Half-Barbaric Twang, 138–39) suggests that the market for hillbilly music became more nationwide in the late twenties and thirties, as migration from the rural South ...