Blues legacies and Black feminism

Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday

427, pagine

lingua English

Pubblicato il 1998 da Pantheon Books.

Numero OCLC:
37418303

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Jazz, it is widely accepted, is the signal original American contribution to world culture. Angela Davis shows us how the roots of that form in the blues must be viewed not only as a musical tradition but as a life-sustaining vehicle for an alternative black working-class collective memory and social consciousness profoundly at odds with mainstream American middle-class values.

And she explains how the tradition of black women blues singers - represented by Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith, and Billie Holiday - embodies not only an artistic triumph and aesthetic dominance over a hostile popular music industry but an unacknowledged proto-feminist consciousness within working-class black communities.

Through a close and riveting analysis of these artists' performances, words, and lives, Davis uncovers the unmistakable assertion and uncompromising celebration of non-middle-class, non-heterosexual social, moral, and sexual values.

3 edizioni

Argomenti

  • Rainey, Ma, 1886-1939
  • Smith, Bessie, 1894-1937
  • Holiday, Billie, 1915-1959
  • Blues (Music) -- History and criticism
  • Blues (Music) -- Texts
  • Feminism and music -- United States
  • Women blues musicians -- United States
  • African American women