Satellite Dish TV

GE Parts

A Race of Singers: Whitman's Working Class Hero from Guthrie to Springsteen (Cultural Studies of the United States)

 

Home

Join
Log in

Members | 580
Recipes | 758

Categories

Appetizers
Beverage
Breads
Breakfast
Desserts
Salads
Side Dish
Soups

Main Dishes

Beef
Chicken
Pasta
Pork
Seafood
Vegetarian

Conversion Charts
Cook Books
 

Cooking Book Store > Cooking books beginning with R
CookingA Race of Singers: Whitman's Working Class Hero from Guthrie to Springsteen (Cultural Studies of the United States)
Published: 01 September, 2000
Our price: $21.95
List price: $21.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: September 14th, 2006 07:07:41 AM

Author: Bryan K. Garman
Similar Cooking Books

CookingAmerican Photography and the American Dream (Cultural Studies of the United States)
CookingMore Work for Mother: The Ironies of Household Technology from the Open Hearth to the Microwave
CookingThe Unpredictable Past: Explorations in American Cultural History
CookingAmusing the Million: Coney Island at the Turn of the Century (American Century)
CookingThe Cultural Experience: Ethnography in Complex Society
Customer comments on this Cooking Book

Cooking Stimulating, Challenging, Fascinating and Important

This is a superb book. Its very well written and exceptionally well researched and thought through. Anyone who's interested in the work of Springsteen, Guthrie and Whitman or the liberatory potential of popular culture will find this book fascinating. I read it like a thriller - staying up all night.

Garman works from a rigorously principled political position which leads him to be very even handed in his assesment of the achievments and failures of the subjects of his study. This is no hagiography but it also has none of the self righteous contempt for the popular that infects so much cultural studies.

This is exemplary work.



Cooking Expanding popular music horizons

Bryan Garman's book provides an indepth study of those singer-songwriters who, according to the author, follow in Whitman's footsteps. He analyzes Woody Guthrie and Springsteen's work thoroughly. The consideration of Guthrie's "hurt song" is fascinating. The author also makes a good case for expanding our horizons beyond the white male heterosexual dominant order. I was rather taken aback to learn that some of my old favorite English folk club singalong songs smacked of homoeroticism. In particular, we are told that Tom Paxton's "Rambling Boy" is "a love song that contains and expresses a homoeroticism that permeated the work of socially engaged artists from Whitman to Traubel, Hughes to Guthrie" (p 159). Gosh, I wonder what Paxton would say about that! I agree with Mr. Garman, however, that much of this New Left rhetoric marginalizes women. That is why folks like Ani Di Franco seem far more engaging and even revolutionary than Springsteen. A Race of Singers has proved an invaluable book for me as I prepare my PhD dissertation at a Spanish university. I recommend it to anyone studying contemporary folk music and its place in recent history.



Cooking Very well written

Garman's analysis of Springsteen, Dylan, Guthrie, and Whitman is very provocative. Especially his insights into Springsteen and the way in which his music played off against (or was interpreted as being in sync with) Reagan's politics, and pop culture in the 80s, such as Rambo. Definitely a worthwhile read for someone who considers her or himself a fan of any of the aforementioned singers, or someone interested in an in-depth analysis of the politics of these singers.




Find more Cooking related products of interest.

Search:
Keywords:
Amazon Logo

FREEBS Copyright Lake Computer Specialists


2004 © GetGourmetRecipes.com - All Right Reserved.  Privacy Policy - Contact Us 


Cook Books