Listening to the Lomax Archive
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Listening to the Lomax Archive
The Sonic Rhetorics of African American Folksong in the 1930s
Stone, Jonathan W.
The University of Michigan Press
11/2021
258
Mole
Inglês
9780472038558
15 a 20 dias
359
Descrição não disponível.
Acknowledgments
For Pete's Sake: Audio Preface
Introduction. Finding Folkness in Rhetorical Studies (Turn, Turn, Turn)
Interlude I: Resimplifications
Chapter 1. Sonic Rhetorical Historiography: Re-Orienting Authenticity During the Inter-War Period
Chapter 2. Rhetoric, Representation, and Race in the Lomax Prison Recordings
Interlude II: Oral History's Exigence
Chapter 3. Inventing Jazz: Jelly Roll Morton and the Sonic Rhetorics of Hot Musical Performance
Interlude III: Popular Front Education
Chapter 4. Folksong on the Radio: The Sounds of Broadcast Democracy on Columbia's American School of the Air
Conclusion. Hearing the Lomax Archive
Appendix: List of Audio Resources
Works Cited
For Pete's Sake: Audio Preface
Introduction. Finding Folkness in Rhetorical Studies (Turn, Turn, Turn)
Interlude I: Resimplifications
Chapter 1. Sonic Rhetorical Historiography: Re-Orienting Authenticity During the Inter-War Period
Chapter 2. Rhetoric, Representation, and Race in the Lomax Prison Recordings
Interlude II: Oral History's Exigence
Chapter 3. Inventing Jazz: Jelly Roll Morton and the Sonic Rhetorics of Hot Musical Performance
Interlude III: Popular Front Education
Chapter 4. Folksong on the Radio: The Sounds of Broadcast Democracy on Columbia's American School of the Air
Conclusion. Hearing the Lomax Archive
Appendix: List of Audio Resources
Works Cited
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
rhetoric;sonic rhetoric;sonic rhetorics;folksong;Lead Belly;Jelly Roll Morton;sound studies;historiography;sonic historiography;rhetoric and composition;writing studies;composition studies;folklore studies;folklore;Alan Lomax;John A. Lomax;Folklife Archive;American Folklife Center;Library of Congress;folkness;African American history;folk song;African American folklore;African American folksong;Golden Gate Quartet;radio studies;American School of the Air;Kenneth Burke;Great Depression;Interwar period;1930s
Acknowledgments
For Pete's Sake: Audio Preface
Introduction. Finding Folkness in Rhetorical Studies (Turn, Turn, Turn)
Interlude I: Resimplifications
Chapter 1. Sonic Rhetorical Historiography: Re-Orienting Authenticity During the Inter-War Period
Chapter 2. Rhetoric, Representation, and Race in the Lomax Prison Recordings
Interlude II: Oral History's Exigence
Chapter 3. Inventing Jazz: Jelly Roll Morton and the Sonic Rhetorics of Hot Musical Performance
Interlude III: Popular Front Education
Chapter 4. Folksong on the Radio: The Sounds of Broadcast Democracy on Columbia's American School of the Air
Conclusion. Hearing the Lomax Archive
Appendix: List of Audio Resources
Works Cited
For Pete's Sake: Audio Preface
Introduction. Finding Folkness in Rhetorical Studies (Turn, Turn, Turn)
Interlude I: Resimplifications
Chapter 1. Sonic Rhetorical Historiography: Re-Orienting Authenticity During the Inter-War Period
Chapter 2. Rhetoric, Representation, and Race in the Lomax Prison Recordings
Interlude II: Oral History's Exigence
Chapter 3. Inventing Jazz: Jelly Roll Morton and the Sonic Rhetorics of Hot Musical Performance
Interlude III: Popular Front Education
Chapter 4. Folksong on the Radio: The Sounds of Broadcast Democracy on Columbia's American School of the Air
Conclusion. Hearing the Lomax Archive
Appendix: List of Audio Resources
Works Cited
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
rhetoric;sonic rhetoric;sonic rhetorics;folksong;Lead Belly;Jelly Roll Morton;sound studies;historiography;sonic historiography;rhetoric and composition;writing studies;composition studies;folklore studies;folklore;Alan Lomax;John A. Lomax;Folklife Archive;American Folklife Center;Library of Congress;folkness;African American history;folk song;African American folklore;African American folksong;Golden Gate Quartet;radio studies;American School of the Air;Kenneth Burke;Great Depression;Interwar period;1930s