Barely Touch the Blues: A Novel chronicles the journey of Moses Moon, a young black man who travels throughout the American South and Midwest during the 1930s in the hopes of becoming a famous blues musician. The novel is about the intersection of music, race, and religion in the Midwest, set during a time in which America found itself on the cusp of change but was still deeply divided—racially, economically, and culturally. Moses must grapple with how these social forces converge to shape his own identity, and how they contribute to differing perceptions about what it means to play the blues
The blues developed as the expressive music of rural African Americans in the South. Primarily sad, ...
The Fictional Black Blues Figure: Blues Music and the Art of Narrative Self-Invention, Kimberly Mack...
Bluesman Cedric Burnside can be heard in the smoky juke joints of Memphis and North Mississippi sing...
Barely Touch the Blues: A Novel chronicles the journey of Moses Moon, a young black man who travels ...
Among the Dahomey of West Africa, the spirit Legba presides over all transitions, and African-Americ...
The Blueswoman is a novel, set in Memphis that explores the cultural identity of the city through a ...
This study examines how music has been treated by writers and critics as being at the heart of Afro-...
Raussert W. Negotiating Temporal Differences: Blues, Jazz and Narrativity in African American Cultur...
Mariah Black is the picaresque tale of Russell Fingers, a failed jazz musician who takes a stab at s...
Journeyman’s Road offers a bold new vision of where the blues have been in the course of the twentie...
This dissertation examines the roles played by jazz and blues in African American fiction of the pos...
The study of music places scholars in a unique position to merge multiple academic disciplines. The ...
The most legendary of the Mississippi bluesmen was Robert Johnson. He was born in 1911 in the southe...
By Adam Gussow University of Tennessee Press (Hardcover, $30.00, ISBN: 1572335696, 6/2007) Journeyma...
This article examines a major African American play to show how the African American minority, throu...
The blues developed as the expressive music of rural African Americans in the South. Primarily sad, ...
The Fictional Black Blues Figure: Blues Music and the Art of Narrative Self-Invention, Kimberly Mack...
Bluesman Cedric Burnside can be heard in the smoky juke joints of Memphis and North Mississippi sing...
Barely Touch the Blues: A Novel chronicles the journey of Moses Moon, a young black man who travels ...
Among the Dahomey of West Africa, the spirit Legba presides over all transitions, and African-Americ...
The Blueswoman is a novel, set in Memphis that explores the cultural identity of the city through a ...
This study examines how music has been treated by writers and critics as being at the heart of Afro-...
Raussert W. Negotiating Temporal Differences: Blues, Jazz and Narrativity in African American Cultur...
Mariah Black is the picaresque tale of Russell Fingers, a failed jazz musician who takes a stab at s...
Journeyman’s Road offers a bold new vision of where the blues have been in the course of the twentie...
This dissertation examines the roles played by jazz and blues in African American fiction of the pos...
The study of music places scholars in a unique position to merge multiple academic disciplines. The ...
The most legendary of the Mississippi bluesmen was Robert Johnson. He was born in 1911 in the southe...
By Adam Gussow University of Tennessee Press (Hardcover, $30.00, ISBN: 1572335696, 6/2007) Journeyma...
This article examines a major African American play to show how the African American minority, throu...
The blues developed as the expressive music of rural African Americans in the South. Primarily sad, ...
The Fictional Black Blues Figure: Blues Music and the Art of Narrative Self-Invention, Kimberly Mack...
Bluesman Cedric Burnside can be heard in the smoky juke joints of Memphis and North Mississippi sing...