Embracing the entire history of jazz poetry, the work defines
this inspired literary genre as poetry necessarily informed by jazz
music. It discusses the major figures and various movements from
the racist poems of the 1920s to contemporary times when the tone
of jazz poetry experienced a dramatic change from elegy to
celebration. The jazz music of Charlie Parker and John Coltrane
transliterated into poetry by the likes of Langston Hughes and
Sterling Brown is but a part of this vital work. This unusual
volume will be of interest to scholars and students of literature,
music, American and African Studies, and popular culture as well as
anyone who enjoys jazz and poetry.
Emphasis is given to a call and response between white and
African American writers. The earliest jazz poems by white writers
from the 1920s, for example, reflected the general anxieties evoked
by jazz, particularly regarding race and sexuality, and jazz did
not fully become embraced in American verse until Langston Hughes
and Sterling Brown published their first books in 1926 and 1932,
respectively. By the 1950s, jazz poetry had become a fad, featuring
jazz and poetry in performance, and this book spends considerable
time addressing the energetic but often wildly unsuccessful work by
dominantly white, West coast writers who turned to Charlie Parker
as their hero. African American poets from the 1960s, however,
focused more on John Coltrane and interpreted his music as a
representation of the Black Civil Rights movement. Jazz poetry from
the 1970s to the present has had less to do with this call and
response between races, and the final two chapters discuss
contemporary jazz poetry in terms of its dramatic change in tone
from elegy to joy.
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