One-Page Paraphrase - communicate the substance of a scholarly article or book chapter - Writing
Do not plagiarize Paper should be well written and organizedThis is for a music classDeliver work on time In a one-page paraphrase, you should be able to communicate the substance of a scholarly article or book chapter concisely, elegantly, and comprehensively. You should not think of the paraphrase as a general summary of a reading without any substantial information.First, read my “Some Remarks on Reading Scholarly Articles.” (Links to an external site.) Then read Eric Porter, Jazz and Revival, American Quarterly 61, no. 3 (2009): 593–613 (Links to an external site.). (This would be the format for the first footnote—see guidelines below.) After completing the reading, write a one-page paraphrase of it. Observe the following guidelines.Compose your paper in Times New Roman, 12-point font, single spaced, without any space between paragraphs (open the Paragraph setting in Word and make sure that it is set to single space without any extra space between paragraphs. I will show you how to do this if you are unable to do it on your own.) Put your name in a header, not in the main text.The first sentence should be a thesis statement (either Porter’s or your own) that communicates the principal claim of the article. This should be followed by a footnote giving the bibliographic information for the article. (The bibliographic information should follow exactly that given above.)Then for the rest, go page by page and write one or two sentences distilling the most important content. These sentences should not generalize the content, but communicate specific detail concisely. Periodically include in parentheses the page numbers or page number ranges for the information you distill. Make sure that the sentences connect logically to the others so that the draft has an overall cohesiveness. It should not read like a random assemblage of information.Include descriptions of important evidence (sometimes mentioned only in the notes).Aim for a total length of around 650 words.This activity is aimed to help you grapple with the very different kind of writing encountered in scholarly articles. You can meet with me to discuss preliminary drafts if desired.
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Jazz and Revival
Eric Porter
American Quarterly, Volume 61, Number 3, September 2009,
pp. 593-613 (Article)
Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press
For additional information about this article
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/aq/summary/v061/61.3.porter.html
Access Provided by University of California @ Santa Cruz at 12/16/10 10:05PM GMT
Jazz and Revival |
Jazz and Revival
Eric Porter
M
y first visit to New Orleans after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
coincided with the 2006 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.
At Jazz Fest and elsewhere in the city that week, I witnessed familiar, though locally inflected, patterns of consuming jazz (and other forms of
African-American music). There were differently integrated audiences across
the city and evidence of nonblack people’s (and some black people’s) deep
respect and collective desire for certain aspects of blackness and their simultaneous anxieties about a threatening black (and particularly poor black) presence.
Acts of identification and disidentification via black music have long histories,
which can be traced back to the antebellum period in the United States.1 Yet,
such acts in the present must also be understood as participating in a local,
national, and, indeed, global cultural economy that is intimately connected
to neoliberal restructuring. In other words, when thinking about the future
of New Orleans at Jazz Fest, it was difficult not to suspect that within the
modes (institutional, financial, discursive, affective) through which this music
was cherished lay both hope for the future and the seeds of reproducing older
formations of racism and some of its recent manifestations.
Responding to the political urgency and critical space generated by the August and September 2005 storms, this essay offers some preliminary thoughts
on the politics of “jazz and revival.” Although this story is still unfolding, I
wish to ponder here the notion that “the culture” can enable the reconstruction of New Orleans. I address some of the thorny issues that have emerged
when jazz, in particular, has been invoked or deployed to rebuild New Orleans,
given the competing claims on the city and its musical cultures, the fault lines
of race and class in play before and after the storm, the long-standing ways
that local musical cultures have reflected both social possibilities and social
exclusions, and the complexities that emerge when the complicated cultural
practices of the past and present collide in the context of disaster.
Wandering through the tents and arenas of Jazz Fest that spring, one could
easily get swept up in the grand sense of multiracial communion promoted by
the festival organizers. Also compelling was the idea, expressed by musicians
©2009 The American Studies Association
593
594 | American Quarterly
and audience members alike, that a shared love for the music and the city
could somehow bring them both back. The stated theme of the festival was
“homecoming.” There were simply sublime moments offered by local luminaries: Irma Thomas joining Paul Simon to sing “Bridge Over Troubled Water,”
Anita Wright singing “I Will Survive,” and the impromptu Sunday afternoon
jam session in the jazz tent, which culminated with “What Does It Mean to
Miss New Orleans,” “When the Saints Go Marching In,” and many words
of appreciation for local musicians and ordinary folk who returned to New
Orleans for Jazz Fest and for the visitors who traveled to the city to support
them. Such homecoming rituals were played out across town, as displaced
New Orleanians returned home to celebrate their city. I witnessed this, for
example, at a brass band show at Donna’s Bar and Grill and at an art opening
and impromptu jam session at a friend’s home. Such performances affirmed,
in the words of Matt Sakakeeny, that “place has anchored culture and culture
has anchored place in New Orleans, creating a dialogic relationship whereby
culture is constituted in place and constitutive of place.”2
Culture was also being deployed as a more specifically economic resource
at Jazz Fest. It was clear that the good feelings of homecoming and multiracial
communion were intertwined with the desire to generate capital, as when one
performer thanked people for their “moral support” and for their “financial
support.” Many local musicians were displaced by Katrina and had difficulty
finding work in the storm’s aftermath. For some, Jazz Fest represented a paycheck, either through the few gigs available to them on the festival grounds
or in the clubs filled with tourists during Jazz Fest season. Perhaps more important, Jazz Fest represented the possibility of more paychecks if the crowds
and enthusiasm accurately signified the local music industry’s revival. More
than one musician on stage, and cultural worker I spoke to off-stage, talked
about the fundamental importance of the music and tourist-friendly festivals
to the city’s collective spiritual resolve and to its tax base.
These invocations of culture as a tool for reconstructing New Orleans speak
to George Yudice’s account of the complex ways that “culture as resource”
serves and constitutes residual and emergent forms of power and knowledge
in the neoliberal era. As a resource, culture “is the lynchpin of a new epistemic
framework in which ideology and much of what Foucault called disciplinary
society . . . are absorbed into an economic or ecological rationality, such that
management, conservation, access, distribution, and investment—in ‘culture’
and the outcomes thereof—take priority.” Yudice adds that culture as resource
fills the political void caused by the neoliberal shrinking of government and a
decline of normative civic participation.3 This perspective has been commonly
Jazz and Revival |
voiced in New Orleans after the storm. As local artist and radio producer Jacqueline Bishop put it, early in 2007, “in post-Katrina, most New Orleanians
are convinced that it is the role of art and artists to rebuild our city, especially
since we have no leadership.”4
We must be attuned, however, to both the progressive and regressive ways
that culture as resource fills the political void and, concomitantly, to how such
processes are connected to economic restructuring. Culture is central to the
new economy of the global age and its attendant division of labor, and to the
formation of “communities,”—understood, depending on the context—as
economic development projects, marketable commodities, political blocs,
or social problems. The creative economy, as Yudice notes, enables the upward flow of capital to a multiculturalism-friendly professional managerial
class, while “subordinate or minoritized groups have a place in this scheme
as low-level service workers and as providers of ‘life giving’ ethnic and other
cultural experiences.” Yet, in the void created by “degovernmentalization,”
the “‘disorganized’ capitalism that spawns myriad networks for the sake of
accumulation also makes possible the networking of all kinds of affinity associations working in solidarity and cooperation.” And “culture, understood
not only affirmatively but, even more important, as a group’s difference from
overarching norms, has become the foundation for claims to recognition and
resources.”5
Jazz Fest, as the list of artists mentioned earlier indicates, fits into a pattern
long-established at other jazz festivals, in which the wide range of sounds sold
and celebrated under the rubric “jazz” signifies an array of musical meanings
and functions. When thinking about how Jazz Fest exemplifies the role of
culture in the reconstruction of New Orleans, we should consider what Lisa
Lowe has termed the “multiplicity of the festival-object.” Examining a 1990
multicultural arts festival in Los Angeles, she identifies competing narratives at
work in the exhibits, performances, spatial arrangements, and acts of consumption evident at that festival. The challenge, she argues, is not to “reconcile the
narratives or to determine one as dominant.” Rather, it is to understand how
competing narratives may produce “both a mode of pluralist containment and
a vehicle for intervention in that containment,” as they simultaneously elide
“material differentiations” among racial, ethnic, and immigrant communities
and expose cracks in the slick, pluralistic facade.6
Jazz has for many decades been a visible signifier of the possibilities of
multiracial democracy in the United States and for black achievement and
distinction. Many such narratives begin in New Orleans, which, as a port city
in a succession of empires and an important crossroads in the southern United
595
596 | American Quarterly
States, provided the multicultural milieu that musicians, and most notably
black and Creole musicians, drew upon as they created a variety of urban and
urbane musical styles they eventually synthesized into something called jazz
near the beginning of the twentieth century. New Orleans has since been seen
as the “cradle” of a music that was uniquely “American” because of its hybrid
composition and also because of the heroism of musicians such as Buddy
Bolden, Louis Armstrong, and Sidney Bechet, who created great art despite,
and in the face of, structures of white supremacy. Such perspectives have been
voiced both from liberal and radical perspectives, by musicians and others.
For some, jazz history and culture affirm the nation’s success in overcoming its
racist legacies. For others, the jazz world betrays many of the racial contradictions of the nation, while illustrating the need for further struggle.7
Indeed, the representations of democracy in action and African-American
distinction presented at Jazz Fest are open to a range of interpretations. One
could certainly read the brass band stage, the second line processions winding
their way through the fairgrounds, and the educational exhibits on Mardi
Gras Indians and second line culture as an explicit validation of unique, local
musical cultures and also of the black working-class communities that have
sustained them. Second lining is a tradition that goes back to the nineteenth
century. It involves public processions generally led by members of the social and pleasure clubs who sponsor them, brass bands, and dancers. These
individuals constitute the “main line” of the parade. The term “second line”
refers to members of the public, the fans, and the curious, who fall in behind
the main line. In New Orleans, one will see ersatz second lines constituted
at tourist-friendly or society events, but there is a much more communally
focused tradition of second lining in black neighborhoods sponsored by social
and pleasure clubs, some of which have also been around since the late nineteenth century. There are about five dozen of these clubs at present, although
many club members are still displaced by the storms. Each typically sponsors
a yearly Sunday parade—some of which, before the storm drew as many as
five thousand people—but the clubs also hold dances and other functions
and may parade for other reasons, such as jazz funerals.
As Helen Regis’s illuminating ethnographic research demonstrates, continually evolving, community-based second line events have long played
important social roles in black New Orleans. Although she emphasizes that
there are diverse interests and orientations informing these participatory
rituals, collectively they may be understood as facilitating a sense of connection to place, affirming members’ neighborhood and its history, constituting
Jazz and Revival |
alternative forms of community and civil society, reclaiming urban space in
the face of the community’s material and symbolic marginalization as well as
from police and drug trade violence, and engaging in implicit and occasionally explicit political protest against police brutality, gentrification, and other
issues facing black working-class and poor people.8 And given that at least
some members of these social and pleasure clubs see it as their mission to
share and generate respect for their musical traditions and their communities
by making these rituals more public and reaching out across racial and class
lines, we may see in these Jazz Fest performances and exhibitions a kind of
grassroots attempt, with official support, to cash in these cultural resources as
a means of generating wider respect for, and knowledge about, New Orleans’s
working-class black communities that could go hand in hand with an equitable
reconstruction of the city.9
Equitable reconstruction, of course, has not been the dominant trend
since the storm. The suddenly apparent social conditions of poor (primarily
black) people in New Orleans brought to light, for many, not only the white
supremacist legacies of slavery and Jim Crow but also the continuing effects of
a generation of deindustrialization, urban renewal projects, suburbanization,
and neoliberal social and economic policies (cuts in education, health care,
welfare, etc.) often enacted against, and justified through, the lives of the black
urban poor. So did the subsequent horrors many people experienced because
of the government’s slow and limited response to the crisis; officials’ failure
to improvise around bureaucratic roadblocks; the “passive indifference” and
outright hostility toward poor black New Orleanians expressed by local, state,
and federal officials; and the privileging of corporate profits rather than workers’ or residents’ rights through no-bid contracts, tax relief, and the relaxation
of labor and environmental laws during the initial phases of rebuilding.10
Yet the fact that others read the government’s failures as proof that the
state should play a smaller role (outside of the military and criminal justice
system, that is) in society illustrated the extent to which the power elite’s cultural work around neoliberalism has been so effective. So did media hysteria
surrounding black people’s behavior during and after the event, which began
with reports that they were irresponsibly slow to evacuate, continued through
racially differentiated descriptions of removing food from shuttered grocery
stores, and culminated with hysteria over a perceived return to savagery in
the Superdome. It is also clear that such media coverage played a functional
role, justifying the state’s neglect after the fact and reproducing the idea that
black people represent a continuing threat to civil society.
597
598 | American Quarterly
In the wake of such devastation and representation, discussions about how
New Orleans will be rebuilt and just who will populate the city in the future
have been paramount. Local residents and activists across the country have
argued eloquently for a right of return for all New Orleanians, regardless of
race, class, and status as homeowners, as well as for their visions for the city
to be realized when reconstructing the city. Yet, from the very beginning, the
reconstruction of New Orleans, whether by design, indifference, or incompetence, has seemed geared toward excluding at least some of its working-class
and, especially, poor black residents. Approximately one-quarter of New Orleans’ pre-Katrina population of 450,000 is still displaced, and that fraction
is disproportionately black and poor. Mayor Ray Nagin’s Bring New Orleans
Back Commission (BNOB) defined the terms of reconstruction for the first
several months after Katrina. While the commission included Wynton Marsalis
and others who publicly argued that all neighborhoods should be restored,
others on the commission, composed primarily of local business elites, voiced
an exclusionist agenda. The BNOB report, released several months after the
storm, suggested it may not be economically or environmentally feasible
to bring back certain neighborhoods, like the Lower Ninth Ward, giving
validation instead to efforts to downsize the city, focusing redevelopment on
its wealthier, higher, and generally whiter areas, and making the city more
amenable to corporate investments.
Nagin ultimately distanced himself from the plan when it became politically
untenable and began promoting instead a “so-called market-focused recovery.” Individuals seeking to return to New Orleans and rebuild would assess
their own risk of future disasters, and make their own decisions about how
to proceed given available funds from government grants, insurance payouts,
and loans available to them. The city, in turn, would determine how much
capital to invest in different neighborhood infrastructures based on how many
people in them decided to rebuild. Although the ultimate outcome of such
planning remains somewhat unclear, Lawrence Powell points out that there is
“an unmistakable Darwinism to Nagin’s market-driven recovery . . . only the
fittest seem likely to survive: those with resources and determination.” Renters, especially the working poor, have very little influence under such a system
and face high prices and limited supply in the rental market, contributing to
high numbers of displaced people and those squatting or living with friends
and relatives. The state’s response to the rental crisis, of providing tax credits
to developers for building low-income housing, has generated cash flow to
small developers who sell these credits to corporations, who in turn use them
to lower their tax bills, but who have, as of yet, provided little in the way of
Jazz and Revival |
new low-income housing. Adding to the crisis is HUD’s controversial decision
to close down some of the city’s still structurally sound public housing or to
convert it to mixed-income units.11
As the State of Louisiana’s Road Home Program, financed with a $7.5 billion federal block grant, finally began to provide funds for owners of damaged
properties, offering them a choice between a grant to assist with rebuilding
or selling their damaged property back to the state, the rate of people taking the buyouts was particularly high in New Orleans’ black working-class
neighborhoods with high rates of home ownership, such as the Lower Ninth
Ward. Given the slow pace of recovery, problems getting insurance payments,
and what many perceive as the hostility to their return to the city, many have
simply given up hope that their neighborhoods will be restored and have
decided that, rather than rebuild, they will take the money and make a go of
it in another city.
In a local context where the connections between music and civic identity
have been long established, and in a broader neoliberal context where “culture as resource” “has become the foundation for claims to recognition and
resources,” invoking music to respond to the exclusionary vision of the city’s
future is appealing. It makes sense as well, given how audible the music has
been in narratives across the planet about the city and its future. The state of
the music has even been seen as a kind of barometer of the city’s recovery. A
May 2007 NPR story about a Knowledge Is Power Program charter school,
for example, used the somewhat dissonant sounds of the school band as a
symbol that the public education system—albeit in a semiprivatized manner–
was coming back.12
Immediately following the storm there were a number of high-profile benefit concerts and CD releases designed to raise money for displaced musicians
and other victims of Katrina. An obvious example was the Higher Ground
benefit concert and CD release organized by Wynton Marsalis, the trumpeter/
composer and artistic director of Jazz at Lincoln Center, who was born and
raised in New Orleans. And since then, at both the local and national local
levels, artists, activists, businesspeople, political leaders, academics, and others have invoked or tried to mobilize the existence of New Orleans’s unique
musical culture ...
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