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Book Review
What
Is This Thing Called Jazz? African American Musicians as Artists, Critics, and
Activists. By
Eric Porter. (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. xxii, 404 pp.
Cloth, $55.00, ISBN 0-520-21872-8. Paper, $22.50, ISBN 0-520-23296-8.)
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on a premise borrowed from Joel A. Rogers concerning the paradoxical nature of
jazz, Eric Porter has written a compelling intellectual history of the
music's impact on African American, American, and international cultural,
institutional, economic, and creative life. He argues convincingly for the
inclusion of musicians as intellectuals, not simply as performers. Porter
opines that musicians' articulations, particularly those of black
performers, are generally overlooked. Important for Porter are the broad
contested contexts that shaped the innovations and reception of jazz and in
turn were shaped by the music. The very word jazz and its associated meanings
had been subject to an ongoing and sometimes acrimonious debate even before
the music broke fully onto the American public's consciousness in the 1920s. |
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