Fictional Blues: Narrative Self-Invention from Bessie Smith to Jack White By Kimberly Mack. University of Massachusetts Press, 2020.

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 0 MUSIC Journal of the Society for American Music Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1017/S1752196322000475
Lydia Warren
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Abstract

for too long, these songs might finally be given the hearing they deserve (181). A Sound History offers a foundation for such a hearing, but does not take the work of a systematic study of the songs upon itself; musical and lyrical detail is examined largely to verify the songs, rather than to consider their aesthetic and political claims. A full examination of the material thus remains a task for future scholarship. Since the book is peppered with invitations to examine the Gellert collection at the Archive of Traditional Music at Indiana University, it would seem this is Garabedian’s hope, too. Such future work might consider further why dismissive attitudes toward Gellert’s collection have persisted long after the postwar conflicts that generated them faded, a question to which Garabedian sketches only one possible answer. Folk and blues scholarship, he suggests in the Epilogue, is a small field, deeply influenced and still well-populated by figures who came of age during the 1960s revival, and it remains an interpretive community whose politics, while progressive, still hold fast to the romantic racialism of their revivalist forebears (177). But as demonstrated by the book’s comparison of the 1930s and 1960s folk revivals, the continuity of personnel does not guarantee a continuity of politics. Further work in this area might, then, ask: What are the continuities between Cold War anticommunism and the neoliberalism of the 2000s, or the rightist populism of the 2010s? Why have some disciplines, such as History and American Studies, been quicker to develop a more sanguine approach to the “dialectic of resistance between ‘red’ and ‘black’” than music studies (12)? Beyond the confines of academic politics, is there space in the contemporary Left, too often mired in bad-faith battles between “class-reductionism” and “racial liberalism,” for this kind of historical example? As the book strongly argues, the lines between academic and national politics are finer than it might be comfortable to believe. As I write, several states have passed, or are in the process of passing laws that would make the songs in Gellert’s volume, and indeed Garabedian’s exegesis, once again “verboten” (29), at least within public education systems. As a study in the racial character of U.S. political suppression, then, Garabedian’s book could not be more timely. As a contribution to U.S. music history, it speaks equally to folklore, cultural history, and music studies without sacrificing accessibility or rigor. And as a validation of a radical tradition, a testament to the possibility of a politics beyond the meagre rewards of whiteness’s “psychological wage,” it is essential.
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《虚构蓝调:从贝西·史密斯到杰克·怀特的叙述性自我发明》,金伯利·麦克著。马萨诸塞大学出版社,2020年。
长久以来,这些歌曲可能最终会得到应有的聆听(181)。《声音史》为这样的听证会提供了基础,但并不需要对歌曲进行系统的研究;音乐和抒情细节在很大程度上是为了验证歌曲,而不是考虑它们的美学和政治主张。因此,对材料的全面审查仍然是未来学术界的一项任务。由于这本书中充斥着对印第安纳大学传统音乐档案馆盖勒特收藏进行研究的邀请,这似乎也是加拉贝迪安的希望。这样的未来工作可能会进一步考虑为什么在战后冲突消退后很长一段时间里,对盖勒特藏品的轻蔑态度一直存在,而加拉贝迪亚对此问题只给出了一个可能的答案。他在《后记》中指出,民间和蓝调学术是一个很小的领域,深受20世纪60年代复兴时期成年人物的影响,而且仍然是一个解释性的群体,其政治虽然进步,但仍然坚持其复兴祖先的浪漫种族主义(177)。但正如该书对20世纪30年代和60年代民间复兴的比较所表明的那样,人员的连续性并不能保证政治的连续性。那么,这一领域的进一步工作可能会问:冷战时期的反共主义和21世纪初的新自由主义,或者2010年代的右翼民粹主义之间的连续性是什么?为什么一些学科,如历史和美国研究,比音乐研究更快地发展出一种更乐观的方法来看待“红与黑之间的辩证抵抗”(12)?在学术政治的局限之外,在经常陷入“阶级还原论”和“种族自由主义”之间的恶意斗争的当代左派中,有没有这种历史例子的空间?正如这本书强烈指出的那样,学术政治和国家政治之间的界限比人们想象的要细。在我写这篇文章的时候,几个州已经通过或正在通过法律,至少在公共教育系统中,这些法律将使盖勒特卷中的歌曲,以及加拉贝迪安的注释再次成为“禁止语”(29)。因此,作为对美国政治镇压的种族特征的研究,Garabedian的书再及时不过了。作为对美国音乐史的贡献,它在不牺牲可访问性或严谨性的情况下,平等地讲述了民俗学、文化史和音乐研究。作为对激进传统的验证,证明了一种超越白人“心理工资”微薄回报的政治的可能性,这一点至关重要。
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