In his influential philosophy of place, Edward Casey distinguishes between three ways of experiencing the world that are either passed over or systematically misconstrued. ‘If imagination projects us out beyond ourselves while memory takes us behind ourselves,’ he observes, ‘place subtends and enfolds us, lying perpetually under and around us’ (Casey, 1993: xvii). This article experiments ways of registering the ordinary experiences of place among early New Orleans musicians as they depart the city in search of new opportunities and return home, sometimes permanently, sometimes only briefly. The narrative moves between different times, places, and particular journeys, featuring a range of voices: some local, some not; some well-known, while...
Michael G. White, jazz musician, scholar, and professor of Spanish and African American Music, Xavie...
The economy of New Orleans has been dependent on cultural tourism for more than a century, and after...
This chapter focuses on the problem of writing jazz history through an analysis of Alan Lomax’s biog...
In his influential philosophy of place, Edward Casey distinguishes between three ways of experiencin...
Conceiving, historicizing, and analyzing the cultural creation of place as a contested musical act, ...
Over the past twenty years, the study of space and place has become a core part of the humanistic di...
Drawing from anthropological fieldwork in three jazz clubs, this dissertation explores the global sc...
Being twofold, the purpose of this thesis is (1) to determine if and how Social Music may be an evol...
Over the last several decades, jazz has undergone a cultural shift from a music associated with soci...
This dissertation explores ways in which many people in New Orleans use, experience, form emotional ...
Songs of the Unsung: The Musical and Social Journey of Horace Tapscott sets forth an astonishing, se...
Any listener knows the power of music to define a place, but few can describe the how or why of this...
Everyday life became a major theme for philosophers, ethnographers, historians, sociologists, cultur...
The Routledge Companion to jazz Studies presents over forty articles from internationally renowned s...
In this study, I examine the jazz novel from a global perspective, following recent trends in musi...
Michael G. White, jazz musician, scholar, and professor of Spanish and African American Music, Xavie...
The economy of New Orleans has been dependent on cultural tourism for more than a century, and after...
This chapter focuses on the problem of writing jazz history through an analysis of Alan Lomax’s biog...
In his influential philosophy of place, Edward Casey distinguishes between three ways of experiencin...
Conceiving, historicizing, and analyzing the cultural creation of place as a contested musical act, ...
Over the past twenty years, the study of space and place has become a core part of the humanistic di...
Drawing from anthropological fieldwork in three jazz clubs, this dissertation explores the global sc...
Being twofold, the purpose of this thesis is (1) to determine if and how Social Music may be an evol...
Over the last several decades, jazz has undergone a cultural shift from a music associated with soci...
This dissertation explores ways in which many people in New Orleans use, experience, form emotional ...
Songs of the Unsung: The Musical and Social Journey of Horace Tapscott sets forth an astonishing, se...
Any listener knows the power of music to define a place, but few can describe the how or why of this...
Everyday life became a major theme for philosophers, ethnographers, historians, sociologists, cultur...
The Routledge Companion to jazz Studies presents over forty articles from internationally renowned s...
In this study, I examine the jazz novel from a global perspective, following recent trends in musi...
Michael G. White, jazz musician, scholar, and professor of Spanish and African American Music, Xavie...
The economy of New Orleans has been dependent on cultural tourism for more than a century, and after...
This chapter focuses on the problem of writing jazz history through an analysis of Alan Lomax’s biog...