Amazon.com: Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop (9780674001930): W. T. Lhamon Jr.: Books


or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
or
Amazon Prime Free Trial required. Sign up when you check out. Learn More
Sell Back Your Copy
For a $2.03 Gift Card
Trade in
More Buying Choices
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop
 
 
Tell the Publisher!
I'd like to read this book on Kindle

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop [Paperback]

W. T. Lhamon Jr. (Author)

List Price: $26.50
Price: $25.44 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
You Save: $1.06 (4%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.
Want it delivered Monday, February 27? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout. Details
Textbook Student FREE Two-Day Shipping for students on millions of items. Learn more

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback $25.44  
Unknown Binding --  

Book Description

May 5, 2000 0674001931 978-0674001930

Cain made the first blackface turn, blackface minstrels liked to say of the first man forced to wander the world acting out his low place in life. It wasn't the "approved" reading, but then, blackface wasn't the "approved" culture either--yet somehow we're still dancing to its renegade tune. The story of an insubordinate, rebellious, truly popular culture stretching from Jim Crow to hip hop is told for the first time in Raising Cain, a provocative look at how the outcasts of official culture have made their own place in the world.

Unearthing a wealth of long-buried plays and songs, rethinking materials often deemed too troubling or lowly to handle, and overturning cherished ideas about classics from Uncle Tom's Cabin to Benito Cereno to The Jazz Singer, W. T. Lhamon Jr. sets out a startlingly original history of blackface as a cultural ritual that, for all its racist elements, was ultimately liberating. He shows that early blackface, dating back to the 1830s, put forward an interpretation of blackness as that which endured a commonly felt scorn and often outwitted it. To follow the subsequent turns taken by the many forms of blackface is to pursue the way modern social shifts produce and disperse culture. Raising Cain follows these forms as they prolong and adapt folk performance and popular rites for industrial commerce, then project themselves into the rougher modes of postmodern life through such heirs of blackface as stand-up comedy, rock 'n' roll, talk TV, and hip hop.

Formally raising Cain in its myriad variants, blackface appears here as a racial project more radical even than abolitionism. Lhamon's account of its provenance and persistence is a major reinterpretation of American culture.


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Beyond Blackface: African Americans and the Creation of American Popular Culture, 1890-1930 (H. Eugene and Lillian Youngs Lehman Series) $27.50

Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop + Beyond Blackface: African Americans and the Creation of American Popular Culture, 1890-1930 (H. Eugene and Lillian Youngs Lehman Series)


Editorial Reviews

Review

[Raising Cain] is a bravura performance, an astounding feat of intellectual detective work that--at its best--reassembles the world in new ways that challenge our assumptions...It's always provocative, as when Lhamon finds evidence of awareness of blackface minstrelsy in works like Benito Cereno, Uncle Tom's Cabin, and Martin Delaney's novel Blake...Connections between the past and the present are no less provocative. Lhamon invokes Al Jolson, rock-and-roll, Elvis, the Rolling Stones, Norman Mailer, Bob Dylan, M.C. Hammer (remember him?) and even talk shows and stand-up comedy as substitutes for vaudeville, claiming all descend from blackface performance...This is a rich and enduring work, a secret history of how the world we live in came to be.
--David Nicholson (Washington Post )

In this animated scholarly performance, W. T. Lhamon Jr. creatively challenges some of our deepest assumptions about blackface minstrelsy...He argues that...instead of dehumanizing stereotypes of African-Americans, it offered an image of 'complex blackness'...[and] that blackface minstrelsy's legacy is manifest in contemporary hip hop, film and literature...Raising Cain is cultural criticism at its most innovative and engaging because it offers insightful ways of imagining the past.
--Leigh Raiford (Times Literary Supplement )

Raising Cain is a provocative look at how the outcasts of official culture have made their own place in the world through stand-up comedy, rock 'n' roll, talk TV, and hip hop.
--J. Ahmed (Awaaz )

What was the first Atlantic mass culture? In this stimulating study, W. T. Lharmon argues that the black minstrel shows--an evening's entertainment based on 'songs, dances and patter purporting to be the behaviour of southern [American] field hands'--enjoyed such booming audiences in the 1840s that they can be envisaged as outcasts who took the popular stage by storm. To the standard account of the beginnings of black minstrelsy in 1843, when Dan Emmett's Virginia Minstrels first performed at the Chatham Theatre, Lhamon adds an interesting discussion of precursors, such as the open-air performers in New York's marketplaces and the more improvised 'plantation frolics'...Raising Cain is full of fresh insights into the meaning of performance--from the cultural significance of whistling to the use of elaborate winks by satirical performers...In political terms, Lhamon's project is to reevaluate the once-scorned aspects of black culture in general and blackface performance in particular, and in Raising Cain he delights in reviving them in all their rude vitality...[Readers] will enjoy a writing style that excels in passionate advocacy, scholarly comment, imaginative sympathy and political acuteness...Raising Cain may raise hackles among the politically correct, but it also deserves to encourage debate about the politics of pop culture.
--Aleks Sierz (Times Higher Education Supplement )

W.T. Lhamon seeks to look beyond the shukkin' and jivin' of minstrelsy to delve into its roots and its historical import--not just to blacks, but to all Americans. In doing so, he provides an in-depth history of blackface performance that begins with New York Negroes dancing for eels and porgies in that city's Catherine Market, takes us through the development of the now maligned Jim Crow character, and examines those modern performers who unwittingly carry on the blackface performance legacy (Hammer time!).
--Kemp Powers (City Pages )

Lhamon is a cutting-edge historian...He makes excellent use not only of song lyrics and theatrical plots, but of illustrations and playbills. Using them, he shows how the dance steps that still excite American youth, whether Michael Jackson's moonwalk or the 'run step' and 'market step' featured in MC Hammer's popular MTV videos, were first danced by slaves and appropriated by minstrels. As Lhamon notes, you can never tell where these elements will turn up; they are deeply embedded in both American popular culture and black culture.
--Joel Dinerstein (American-Statesman )

[A] pathbreaking book...[and] a rich trove of fresh meaning and flashing insight...[Lhamon is] an acute sensor on whom nothing is lost.
--Thomas Cripps (Journal of American History )

Lhamon's provocative thesis gains persuasive momentum by enabling readers to empathize with early artists and audiences, a goal he pursues through interpreting a variety of fascinating texts....[Lhamon creates] a synthesis [between interpretive voice and historical analysis] that offers a model for scholars of cultural history...and offers the conceptual foundation for a new, process-oriented paradigm for the study of cultural history.
--Howard L. Sacks (American Quarterly )

Lhamon...look[s] primarily at 'the links blackface performance made across race and class,' and thus investigate[s] 'struggles over interracial fascination, against and for it, leading to [the form's] transmission, recombination, and cultural work.' He succeeds admirably...The strength of Raising Cain is its reconsideration of long-held and often skewed views of minstrelsy, its author's contextualization of the topic with historical data (as a cultural historian) and literary allusions (as a literary critic), and the lively and thought-provoking explications that spring from Lhamon's fertile, questioning mind.
--D.B. Wilmeth (Choice )

Jim Crow is our Punch and Judy--every one responds to it. But Jim Crow, unlike Punch and Judy, is by its nature explosive, dangerous, unresolved, and coded.The language of Jim Crow is a set of secret languages hidden within everyday talk, indications of sin, guilt, domination, violence, and fate communicated through seemingly meaningless gestures. One of the truly fascinating aspects of Raising Cain is the way Lhamon shows how these gestures retain both their shapes and meanings as they travel through the decades and from one century to another, from one part of the country to another. In my reading of contemporary American cultural criticism, or cultural criticism generally, Lhamon's ability to supersede the barriers between cultural forms that most writers take for granted is very nearly unique. Beyond his consistently forceful, lucid, jargon-free, careful, an enthusiastic prose style, I think this is the most striking aspect of his work. Lhamon's book locates the sources, practice, and reception of minstrelsy as a cultural battleground, and takes it as seriously as other historians of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have taken religious revivals.
--Greil Marcus

W. T. Lhamon's dazzling book is an extraordinary piece of work that offers much. By turns he is marvelously erudite, probing, poetic, witty, and politically incisive. This is a book about race in America which distinguishes itself by conceding nothing to the pieties that regulate what can be said openly on the subject. The history and historiography of minstrelsy and mimesis are folded into powerful readings of texts, performances, and films that are both well-known and entirely unfamiliar. Throughout, 'theoretical' commentaries on culture and its transactional workings are skillfully interwoven with Lhamon's own observations and critical expositions. Raising Cain will obviously become a central reference point for future discussions of race and culture."
--Paul Gilroy (Goldsmiths' College, University of London )

Freely and elegantly moving between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and between high culture (Melville and Stowe in particular among earlier figures) and popular entertainment, this is an engaging and passionately personal study of blackface minstrelsy and its radical agenda and lasting importance in the continuing creation of United States culture. (Nineteenth-Century Literature )

[W. T. Lhamon] examines the emotions that helped to generate blackface, a form of performance that in the 1830s erupted across the industrial world. In so doing he directly counters those historians who have lambasted minstrelsy as a purveyor of racial abuse. Blackface, as he sees it, was a liberating ritual, a proletarian cultural form through which marginal peoples made sense of themselves...The book is exhilarating in its command of the topic, in the stylishness of the writing, and in its ability to read in a wink or a whistle or a bent kneebone the traces of profound social and economic change.
--Marybeth Hamilton (Journal of Contemporary History )

About the Author

W. T. Lhamon, Jr., is Emeritus Professor of English at Florida State University and Lecturer in American Studies at Smith College.

Product Details


More About the Author

Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

Customer Reviews


There are no customer reviews yet.
Video reviews
Video reviews
Amazon now allows customers to upload product video reviews. Use a webcam or video camera to record and upload reviews to Amazon.



Inside This Book (learn more)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
First Sentence:
We want to dance, too. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
blackface lore cycle, lore cycles, folk drawing, blackface performance, moving ratio, black gestures, blackface mask, dey neber, filthy rites, blackface performers, shaving scene, rough labor, minstrel mask, minstrel stage, fraternal strife, minstrel performers, black performance, minstrel show
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Jim Crow, New York, Catherine Market, Catherine Slip, Bone Squash, Five Points, Benito Cereno, Bobolink Bob, Dan Emmett, The Jazz Singer, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Mary Dale, North America, United States, Catherine Street, Ginger Blue, George Washington Dixon, Long Island, New Orleans, The Virginia Mummy, Arthur Tappan, Billy Whitlock, Coffee Dan, Darktown Strutters, Seventh Ward
New!
Books on Related Topics | Concordance | Text Stats
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
Search Inside This Book:





Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
 
(3)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   
Related forums



So You'd Like to...


Create a guide


Look for Similar Items by Category


Look for Similar Items by Subject