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Rhythm and Resistance: Explorations in the Political Uses of Popular Music (Media and Society Series)
 
 
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Rhythm and Resistance: Explorations in the Political Uses of Popular Music (Media and Society Series) [Hardcover]

Ray Pratt (Author)

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Book Description

0275926249 978-0275926243 May 23, 1990
This important new study of the political uses of popular music, from the era of slavery to the present traces the search for individual identity, freedom, and dignity as it has been expressed in popular music. Beginning with the spirituals of the slaves and the gospel of the black church and continuing through the blues, jazz forms, country, folk, and rock, Pratt presents popular music as part of a continuing effort, over two centuries, to create community values and identity in the face of social transformations. The book refutes the idea that the use of popular music for expression by a "socially marginal" society is new. Pratt demonstrates that popular music as an expression of community identity is centuries old. Early chapters of the book explore the social and political functions of music and its relationship to the concept of culture, individualism, and freedom. Later chapters concentrate on the history and role of political messages in specific music forms: the blues, gospel, jazz, rock and soul. A summary chapter considers the future of American popular music as an instrument of political expression. Extensive references and chapter endnotes make this book an important edition to the popular culture library. Students and scholars of musicology, sociology, popular culture, and politics will find Rhythm and Resistance a valuable reference. and will be of special interest to academics engaged in research in musicology, popular culture and politics and culture.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Pratt's subject is the creation and use of popular music by Arfican-Americans, women, the poor, and the variously dipossessed in American life. Spirituals, blues, gospel, folk, and rock are considered expressions of hope, reflections of disillusioment, and a vehicle for promoting sociopolitical change. Although Pratt questions the political success of this music, particularly that of the hypercommerical rock scene, he believes that 'Popular culture...remains the primary means of resistance and the most widely used channel for expression of emancipatory political perspectives.' Without comments on their purely musical abilities, Pratt finds Woodie Guthrie, Bob Dylan, and Bruce Springsteen the most provocative songwriter-performers. Copiously researched and well documented, this book is strongest on African-American music and weakest on rock, with no coverage of punk, the most blatanly antisocial of all pop genres. Pratt eschews the polemics that too often obscure the real issues in books on this topic and focuses instead on the experiences of the performers and their audiences. Primarily for undergraduate students of social science and the general reader.”–Choice

“. . . this well-documented book has much to offer. Pratt has achieved his aim of writing a reference work for `students and scholars of musicology, sociology, popular culture, and politics.'”–Jazztimes

About the Author

RAY PRATT has taught at Montana State University/Bozeman since 1971 and is Professor in the Political Science department.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Three seemingly isolated incidents of cultural practice illuminate the political problems raised by popular music in the late 1980s. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
substitute imagery, black popular music, subjective competence, blues tradition, mass popular culture, urban blues, musical discourse
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Woody Guthrie, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Oxford University Press, World War, Rolling Stone, Pete Seeger, Simon Frith, Stuart Hall, Tracy Chapman, Greil Marcus, Joe Hill, Village Voice, Random House, Serge Denisoff, Big Road Blues, Kansas City, Alan Lomax, University of California Press, Vintage Books, Black Talk, John Lennon, San Francisco
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