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In praise of authenticity? Atmosphere, song, and Southern states of mind in Searching for the Wrong-eyed Jesus

Hodgin, Nick ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7762-719X 2015. In praise of authenticity? Atmosphere, song, and Southern states of mind in Searching for the Wrong-eyed Jesus. Mazierska, Ewa and Gregory, Georgina, eds. Relocating Popular Music, Pop Music, Culture and Identity, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 186-206. (10.1057/9781137463388_10)

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Abstract

‘It so happens’ writes Michael O’Brien, ‘that a disproportionate amount of American popular culture […] is southern. Jazz, blues, rhythm and blues, rock music, country and western, much in those genres is southern or part of a southern cultural diaspora’. He goes on to mention the omnipresence of depictions of the South in film and television, the influence of Southern literature before claiming that ‘to know the South is indispensable to understanding America’ (O’Brien 2007: 11). It was not always thus: James Cobb argues that the late arrival of Southern music — especially country music — to the rest of America occurred at a time (1970s) when the nation was adjusting to the ‘twin shock of defeat and disillusionment previously only associated with the experience and heritage of the Southern states’ (Cobb 1999: 78). It is worth noting that Southern music — hillbilly music — was not simply unknown previously, it was actively reviled for it was seen as the noise made by the primitive half of the US. If New England was understood as the ‘genesis and crystallization of “American civilization”’, argues Larry Griffin (2006: 7), then the South was ‘America’s opposite, its negative image, its evil twin’.

Item Type: Book Section
Status: Published
Schools: Modern Languages
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9781137463388
Last Modified: 03 Nov 2022 10:06
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/106915

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