Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013This study looks at the Cotton Club, the most famous nightclub in American history, and its position in the histories of the American urban landscape and the white imagination. The Cotton Club is remarkably both very well-known and academically unexplored, and this work both begins that exploration and revises the simple binary that positions the club as either a place of segregated racial misery or unencumbered Jazz Age joy. The floorshows at the club from 1925-1940 both reinscribed a white, heteronormative dominance but these performances also made inroads into subverting that dominance. The shows allowed expression from some of the most highly regarded African American performers of the 192...
This dissertation argues that in the years 1950 to 1984, ballroom dance studios in Atlanta were spac...
This dissertation brings a different geographic focus, and a needed racial focus as well, to a burge...
This dissertation examines the emergence of social networks created by African American women who lo...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013This study looks at the Cotton Club, the most famous n...
From 1926 to 1958, the Savoy Ballroom in New York's Harlem neighborhood played a critical role in t...
The Harlem Jazz Scene was prominent throughout the 20th century. Beginning with the Harlem Renaissan...
This Independent Study looks at the various aspects of speakeasies during Prohibition, and social ch...
This dissertation argues that the Lindy Hop and the culture surrounding it provide a means for escap...
This dissertation explores the leisure practices and spaces that African Americans participated in a...
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of Kansas, American Studies, 2007.The music later called "jazz" flo...
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of Kansas, American Studies, 2007.The music later called "jazz" flo...
My dissertation looks at representations of Africa throughout Broadway's history in order to explore...
This dissertation explores the leisure practices and spaces that African Americans participated in a...
My dissertation looks at representations of Africa throughout Broadway's history in order to explore...
This dissertation brings a different geographic focus, and a needed racial focus as well, to a burge...
This dissertation argues that in the years 1950 to 1984, ballroom dance studios in Atlanta were spac...
This dissertation brings a different geographic focus, and a needed racial focus as well, to a burge...
This dissertation examines the emergence of social networks created by African American women who lo...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013This study looks at the Cotton Club, the most famous n...
From 1926 to 1958, the Savoy Ballroom in New York's Harlem neighborhood played a critical role in t...
The Harlem Jazz Scene was prominent throughout the 20th century. Beginning with the Harlem Renaissan...
This Independent Study looks at the various aspects of speakeasies during Prohibition, and social ch...
This dissertation argues that the Lindy Hop and the culture surrounding it provide a means for escap...
This dissertation explores the leisure practices and spaces that African Americans participated in a...
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of Kansas, American Studies, 2007.The music later called "jazz" flo...
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of Kansas, American Studies, 2007.The music later called "jazz" flo...
My dissertation looks at representations of Africa throughout Broadway's history in order to explore...
This dissertation explores the leisure practices and spaces that African Americans participated in a...
My dissertation looks at representations of Africa throughout Broadway's history in order to explore...
This dissertation brings a different geographic focus, and a needed racial focus as well, to a burge...
This dissertation argues that in the years 1950 to 1984, ballroom dance studios in Atlanta were spac...
This dissertation brings a different geographic focus, and a needed racial focus as well, to a burge...
This dissertation examines the emergence of social networks created by African American women who lo...