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The maieutic art of Paul Rosenfeld : music criticism and American sulcture, 1916-1946Aquila, Dominic, Anthony 06 1900 (has links)
Paul L. Rosenfeld ( 1890-1946) almost single-handedly established the music of living
American composers on a solid critical foundation in the period between the two world wars.
Although he built a reputation chiefly as a critic of music, he was a man ofletters who ranged
across all the arts with unrivaled competence and ease. Rosenfeld's contemporaries
acknowledged him as a champion of that strain of modernism which celebrated the
interrelatedness of the arts. His importance for the wider culture of early twentieth-century
American modernism also lay in his seriousness about the arts. Rosenfeld earned forward the
American democratic and romantic belief, epitomized by Walt Whitman and Alfred Stieglitz, in
the capacity of art to articulate basic values that enrich and even ennoble the human person.
Such an idealistic conception of the value of art was increasingly losing favor among the
American literati during the 1920s, the period when Rosenfeld enjoyed his greatest influence and
prestige. During this decade of"terrible honesty," American intellectuals tended to dismiss the
"ideals of men" in favor of a single-minded interest in a more bitter realism. Inasmuch as they
denigrated the notion that art held any kind of privileged status as a conveyor of values, they
were in effect nascent postmodemists.
This study ofPaul Rosenfeld's life and work examines the achievements ofPaul
Rosenfeld as a critic of the arts in their relation to the wider American culture of the interwar
years, and as a purveyor of modernism against the background of the first strains of
postmodemism. It will also treat at length Rosenfeld's efforts as a writer, editor, and minor philanthropist on behalf of establishing a distinctively American music, literature, and painting.
This cultural nationalism, I argue, is best understood as part ofRosenfeld's modernist project.
To a lesser degree this thesis also deals with the changing position of the man of letters in
American life. / History / D. Litt et Phil. (History)
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Gender, Politics, Market Segmentation, and Taste: Adult Contemporary Radio at the End of the Twentieth CenturySenger, Saesha 01 January 2019 (has links)
This dissertation explores issues of gender politics, market segmentation, and taste through an examination of the contributions of several artists who have achieved Adult Contemporary (AC) chart success. The scope of the project is limited to a period when many artists who figured prominently in both the broader mainstream of American popular music and the more specific Adult Contemporary category were most commercially viable: from the mid-1980s through the 1990s. My contention is that, as gender politics and gendered social norms continued to change in the United States at this time, Adult Contemporary – the chart, the format, and the associated music – was an important, if overlooked or even trivialized, arena in which these shifting gender dynamics played out. This dissertation explores the significance of the Adult Contemporary format at the end of the twentieth century through analysis of chart performance, artist image, musical works, marketing, and contextual factors. By documenting these relevant social, political, economic, and musical factors, the notable role of a format and of artists neglected by scholars becomes clear.
I explore these issues in the form of lengthy case studies. Examinations of how Adult Contemporary artists such as Michael Bolton, Wilson Phillips, Matchbox Twenty, David Gray, and Mariah Carey were produced and marketed, and how their music was disseminated, illustrate record and radio industry strategies for negotiating the musical, political, and social climate of this period. Significantly, musical and lyrical analyses of songs successful on AC stations, and many of their accompanying promotional videos highlight messages about musical genre, gender, race, and age. This dissertation ultimately demonstrates that Adult Contemporary-oriented music figured significantly in the culture wars, second and third wave feminism, expressions of masculinity, Generation-X struggles, postmodern identity, and market segmentation.
This study also illustrates how the record and radio industries have managed audience composition and behavior to effectively and more predictably produce and market music in the United States. This dissertation argues that, amid broader social determinations for taste, the record industry, radio programmers, and Billboard chart compilers and writers have helped to make and reinforce certain assumptions about who listens to which music and why they do so. In addition, critics have weighed in on what different musical genres and artists have offered and for whom, often assigning higher value to music associated with certain genres, socio-political associations, and listeners while claiming over-commercialization, irrelevance, aesthetic insignificance, and bad taste for much other music.
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