Listening for Africa: Freedom, Modernity, and the Logic of Black Music's African Origins

Listening for Africa: Freedom, Modernity, and the Logic of Black Music's African Origins

by David F. Garcia
Listening for Africa: Freedom, Modernity, and the Logic of Black Music's African Origins

Listening for Africa: Freedom, Modernity, and the Logic of Black Music's African Origins

by David F. Garcia

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Overview

In Listening for Africa David F. Garcia explores how a diverse group of musicians, dancers, academics, and activists engaged with the idea of black music and dance’s African origins between the 1930s and 1950s. Garcia examines the work of figures ranging from Melville J. Herskovits, Katherine Dunham, and Asadata Dafora to Duke Ellington, Dámaso Pérez Prado, and others who believed that linking black music and dance with Africa and nature would help realize modernity’s promises of freedom in the face of fascism and racism in Europe and the Americas, colonialism in Africa, and the nuclear threat at the start of the Cold War. In analyzing their work, Garcia traces how such attempts to link black music and dance to Africa unintentionally reinforced the binary relationships between the West and Africa, white and black, the modern and the primitive, science and magic, and rural and urban. It was, Garcia demonstrates, modernity’s determinations of unraced, heteronormative, and productive bodies, and of scientific truth that helped defer the realization of individual and political freedom in the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822373117
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 07/27/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 376
File size: 16 MB
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About the Author

David F. Garcia is Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and the author of Arsenio Rodríguez and the Transnational Flows of Latin Popular Music.

Table of Contents

Preface  ix
Acknowledgments  xi
Introduction  1
1. Analyzing the African Origins of Negro Music and Dance in a Time of Racism, Fascism, and War  21
2. Listening to Africa in the City, in the Laboratory, and on Record  74
3. Embodying Africa against Racial Oppression, Ignorance, and Colonialism  124
4. Disalienating Movement and Sound from the Pathologies of Freedom and Time  173
5. Desiring Africa, or Western Civilization's Discontents  221
Conclusion. Dance-Music as Rhizome  268
Notes  277
Bibliography  323
Index  345

What People are Saying About This

The Amazing Bud Powell: Black Genius, Jazz History, and the Challenge of Bebop - Guthrie P. Ramsey Jr

“David F. Garcia’s deftly argued study brings to light how black music and dance became a defining factor during the high years of Afro-modernism, 1930s to 1950s. Because it emerged from conscious artistic intent, black dance ‘made’ many things: myths of origins, race’s content, and even modernism itself. Garcia treats black dance as a community theater that staged the scramble for an African Diaspora, a movement that was international and with multiple roots and aspirations. Black dance, Garcia teaches us, was more than just a lot of shaking and jumping. It made a world.”

Freedom Sounds: Civil Rights Call out to Jazz and Africa - Ingrid Monson

"David F. Garcia's linkage of jazz, Cuban and Latin American music, and Africa, along with his focus on understudied figures, is compelling. Garcia's work makes a powerful intervention in jazz studies as well as the field of Africanist ethnomusicology. We need this book."

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