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Black Women Dancers, Jazz Culture, and “Show Biz”: Recentering Afro-Culture and Reclaiming Dancing Black Bodies in Montréal, 1920s–1950s

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
  • Jabouin, Emilie (Auteur)
Titre
Black Women Dancers, Jazz Culture, and “Show Biz”: Recentering Afro-Culture and Reclaiming Dancing Black Bodies in Montréal, 1920s–1950s
Résumé
The documentary Show Girls, directed by Meilan Lam, makes an unprecedented contribution to the history of jazz and Black women jazz dancers in Montréal, Quebec, and to the conversation of jazz in Canada. Show Girls offers a glimpse into the lives of three Black women dancers of the 1920s–1950s. This essay asks what the lives of Black women dancers were like and how they navigated their career paths in terms of social and economic opportunities and barriers. I seek to better understand three points: (1) the gap in the study of jazz that generally excludes and/or separates dance and singing from the music; (2) the use of dance as a way to commercialize, sell, and give visual and conceptual meaning to jazz; (3) the importance of the Black body and the role of what I would define as “Afro- culture” in producing the ingenious and creative genre of jazz. My study suggests there is a dominant narrative of jazz, at least in academic literature, that celebrates one dimension of jazz as it was advertised in show business, and that bringing in additional components of jazz provides a counternarrative, but also a restorative, whole and more authentic story of jazz and its origins. More specifically, by re- exploring jazz as a whole culture that relies on music, song, and dance, this essay explores three major ideas. First, Black women dancers played a significant role in the success of jazz shows. Second, they articulated stories of self, freedom, and the identity of the New Negro through jazz culture and dance. Third, Black women’s bodies and art were later crystallized into images that further served to sell jazz as a product of show business.
Publication
Canadian Journal of History
Volume
56
Numéro
3
Pages
229-265
Date
2021
DOI
10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0030
URL
https://doi.org/10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0030
Référence
Jabouin, E. (2021). Black Women Dancers, Jazz Culture, and “Show Biz”: Recentering Afro-Culture and Reclaiming Dancing Black Bodies in Montréal, 1920s–1950s. Canadian Journal of History, 56(3), 229–265. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0030
Enjeux
  • Création et composition
  • Musique "live"
  • Territoire : Nationalisme, colonialisme, transnationalisme, langue
Genres musicaux
  • Jazz
Identités
  • Femmes*
  • Racialisation
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliodig/bibliographie/HXQC3VGS
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