Irrational amusements,theatre law,and moral reformers in nineteenth-century America: implications for later popular music study |
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Authors: | Gillian Margaret Rodger |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee , 3616 S. Quincy Avenue, Milwaukee , WI 53207 , USA grodger@uwm.edu |
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Abstract: | This paper considers several case studies of conflicts between moral reformers active in US cities and venues catering to working-class audiences from the 1860s to 1880s. For moral reformers, theatrical entertainments, particularly forms with no educational or moral purpose, were deeply corrupting and threatened not only the well-being of the individual, but also that of the nation. These case studies show that tensions emerged when popular styles sought to expand their audience beyond their traditional patrons or to move into respectable areas of the city – in other words, when they did not stay in their traditional place. This is also true of the many hybrid musical forms that combined European-based folk or religious styles with African-American music. Forms such as jazz and rock ‘n’ roll did not elicit significant protest until they began to find an audience in northern cities among middle- and lower-middle-class youth. Exploring how laws were changed in response to earlier conflicts adds a crucial historical perspective to popular music studies, which tends to remain firmly focused on music from the mid-twentieth century onwards. |
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Keywords: | entertainment law leisure social class jazz rock ‘n’ roll |
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