Jews, Race and Popular Music
Jews, Race and Popular Music
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Author(s): Stratton, Jon
ISBN No.: 9781138266001
Pages: 238
Year: 201611
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 83.16
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

'Jon Stratton's book is a powerful contribution to not only Jewish studies, but our understanding of popular music. Exploring the ambivalent relationship to "whiteness" by Jews in America, England and Australia, Stratton shows that this dance between acceptance and rejection, assimilation and self-identification, is essential to our notions of rock, soul, and countless other forms of popular music. Beginning with minstrelsy, Stratton draws connections between this early bridge to "whiteness" and later musical movements such as torch singing, folk rock and hip hop. A well-researched, broad-reaching, and admirable book, Stratton's "Jews, Race and Popular Music" is also enjoyable, just like the music it describes.' Steven Lee Beeber, author of The Heebie-Jeebies at CBGB's: A Secret History of Jewish Punk 'In this wide-ranging, continent-hopping, and reference-stuffed study, Jon Stratton has taken on the old "What is Jewish music?" question with both new vigor and a keen pop ear for issues of racial formation and musical identity. He adds new insight to familiar subjects - Tin Pan Alley, The Brill Building - and brings the Jewish question to bear on torch singing and the blues revival like few others have. That he follows the story to Australia and the U.K.


(Helen Shapiro, meet Amy Winehouse) only adds to the book's sweep. Let the debates begin.' Josh Kun, University of Southern California, author of Audiotopia: Music, Race, and America 'Recommended.' Choice 'In these different intersections of visuality and sound, of face and voice, of black, and white and Jew, the book contributes with important questions concerning different ways of reading popular music's history. The last word on popular music and race will be a long time coming, but along the way Stratton's discussions are going to contribute significantly to this on-going debate.' Popular Musicology Online Jon Stratton's study is thought-provoking stuff with much of releva.


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