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Jake Johnson deposited Post-Secular Musicals in a Post-Truth World in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 2 years, 2 months ago
In this chapter, I make two interconnected observations. I first consider how musicals inhabit and promote a ‘post-truth’ worldview similar to those reflected in current populist resurgences throughout the West. I argue that it is musical theater’s penchant for the unreal that in recent decades has given it traction within both secular,…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited Post-Secular Musicals in a Post-Truth World on Humanities Commons 2 years, 2 months ago
In this chapter, I make two interconnected observations. I first consider how musicals inhabit and promote a ‘post-truth’ worldview similar to those reflected in current populist resurgences throughout the West. I argue that it is musical theater’s penchant for the unreal that in recent decades has given it traction within both secular,…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 2 years, 3 months ago
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Jake Johnson deposited PERFORMING THE PATRON: BETTY FREEMAN AND THE AVANT-GARDE in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
Little can be said about music during the last century without encountering the men and women who supported it financially. Pierre Bourdieu’s impression that the services rendered freely for the good of society reinforce a symbolic debt between giver and recipient complicates motivations behind patronage. Indeed, applying Bourdieu’s theory to alt…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “Unstuck in time”: Harry Partch’s Bilocated Life in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
In a letter dated to 1960, Harry Partch describes living two lives simultaneously—one in modern America and another in ancient Greece. Furthermore, throughout his life, Partch exhibited striking dualities in both his music and personal life. Partch’s affinity for Greek themes and modalities in his music and musical theory is well known, but les…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “That’s Where They Knew Me When”: Oklahoma Senior Follies and the Narrative of Decline in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
American musical theater occupies a unique space relative to other popular music genres. This is particularly true with regards to the ways aging performers are valued. Whereas aging or aged voices in popular music are often revered as “authentic,” aging musical theater performers face an industry largely uninvested in positive representations of…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited Calling out the nameless: CocoRosie’s Posthuman sound world in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
“To engage with CocoRosie requires absolute suspension of disbe- lief,” writes The Guardian. This has as much to do with their music as their appearance, for sisterly duo CocoRosie have embraced what they call a “posthuman kind of style” rooted in the dissolution of gender. In an effort to imagine a world beyond human constructions of gender,…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited PERFORMING THE PATRON: BETTY FREEMAN AND THE AVANT-GARDE on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
Little can be said about music during the last century without encountering the men and women who supported it financially. Pierre Bourdieu’s impression that the services rendered freely for the good of society reinforce a symbolic debt between giver and recipient complicates motivations behind patronage. Indeed, applying Bourdieu’s theory to alt…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “Unstuck in time”: Harry Partch’s Bilocated Life on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
In a letter dated to 1960, Harry Partch describes living two lives simultaneously—one in modern America and another in ancient Greece. Furthermore, throughout his life, Partch exhibited striking dualities in both his music and personal life. Partch’s affinity for Greek themes and modalities in his music and musical theory is well known, but les…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “That’s Where They Knew Me When”: Oklahoma Senior Follies and the Narrative of Decline on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
American musical theater occupies a unique space relative to other popular music genres. This is particularly true with regards to the ways aging performers are valued. Whereas aging or aged voices in popular music are often revered as “authentic,” aging musical theater performers face an industry largely uninvested in positive representations of…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited Calling out the nameless: CocoRosie’s Posthuman sound world on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
“To engage with CocoRosie requires absolute suspension of disbe- lief,” writes The Guardian. This has as much to do with their music as their appearance, for sisterly duo CocoRosie have embraced what they call a “posthuman kind of style” rooted in the dissolution of gender. In an effort to imagine a world beyond human constructions of gender,…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited The Music Room: Betty Freeman’s Musical Soirées on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months ago
For over ten years, Los Angeles arts patron Betty Freeman (1921–2009) welcomed composers, performers, scholars, patrons, and invited guests into her home for a series of monthly musicales that were known as ‘Salotto’. In this article, I analyse Freeman’s musicales within a sociological framework of gender and what Randall Collins calls ‘intera…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 5 years, 5 months ago