‘A superb library at bargain cost’

IF 0.1 0 MUSIC
A. Ainsworth
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Offering access to low-cost authoritative literature, the Jazz Book Club was a successful and influential venture, publishing 66 subscription titles and 11 occasional volumes between 1956 and 1967. The Club was created to meet the demand for information by the rapidly growing post-war jazz audience in Britain. Extending the intellectual discourse of the 1930s, an educated, socially diverse generation coming to jazz in the 1940s and 1950s was serious about the music and earnest in their pursuit of information. Although the new fans were often fiercely partisan in their preferences, the Club believed its book choices would appeal broadly across the emerging jazz community. Surprisingly, the Jazz Book Club has been little researched. Using previously unexamined archival records and Jazz Book Club publications, contemporary journals and personal recollections alongside recent scholarship, this article provides the first full account of a small but important moment in British jazz history. Drawing on Karl Mannheim’s epistemology of generations, I argue that the Jazz Book Club was created to meet the demands of a young post-war generation for whom jazz assumed an unexampled measure of cultural saliency. The Jazz Book Club’s moment passed as a later generation turned away from jazz after the early 1960s.
“物美价廉的一流图书馆”
爵士图书俱乐部提供低成本的权威文献,是一家成功且有影响力的企业,在1956年至1967年间出版了66本订阅书和11本偶尔出版的书。该俱乐部的成立是为了满足战后英国迅速增长的爵士乐观众对信息的需求。扩展了20世纪30年代的知识话语,在20世纪40年代和50年代,受过教育、社会多元化的一代人开始接触爵士乐,他们对音乐很认真,并认真追求信息。尽管新歌迷的偏好往往带有强烈的党派色彩,但俱乐部相信,他们的书籍选择将在新兴的爵士乐社区中广受欢迎。令人惊讶的是,爵士读书俱乐部的研究很少。这篇文章利用了以前未经审查的档案记录和爵士图书俱乐部的出版物、当代期刊和个人回忆,以及最近的学术成果,首次全面描述了英国爵士乐史上一个微小但重要的时刻。根据卡尔·曼海姆对几代人的认识论,我认为爵士乐读书俱乐部的成立是为了满足战后年轻一代的需求,对他们来说,爵士乐具有无与伦比的文化显著性。20世纪60年代初,随着后来一代人远离爵士乐,爵士书友会的时刻过去了。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Jazz Research Journal explores a range of cultural and critical views on jazz. The journal celebrates the diversity of approaches found in jazz scholarship and provides a forum for interaction and the cross-fertilisation of ideas. It is a development and extension of The Source: Challenging Jazz Criticism founded in 2004 at the Leeds College of Music. The journal aims to represent a range of disciplinary perspectives on jazz, from musicology to film studies, sociology to cultural studies, and offers a platform for new thinking on jazz. In this respect, the editors particularly welcome articles that challenge traditional approaches to jazz and encourage writings that engage with jazz as a discursive practice. Jazz Research Journal publishes original and innovative research that either extends the boundaries of jazz scholarship or explores themes which are central to a critical understanding of the music, including the politics of race and gender, the shifting cultural representation of jazz, and the complexity of canon formation and dissolution. In addition to articles, the journal features a reviews section that publishes critical articles on a variety of media, including recordings, film, books, educational products and multimedia publications.
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