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  • av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    376,-

    A deep dive into racial politics, Hollywood, and Black cultural struggles for liberation as reflected in the extraordinary life and times of Sammy Davis Jr.   Through the lens of Sammy Davis Jr.'s six-decade career in show business-from vaudeville to Vegas to Broadway, Hollywood, and network TV-Dancing Down the Barricades examines the workings of race in American culture. The title phrase holds two contradictory meanings regarding Davis's cultural politics: Did he dance the barricades down, as he liked to think, or did he simply dance down them, as his more radical critics would have it?   Davis was at once a pioneering, barrier-busting, anti-Jim Crow activist and someone who was widely associated with accommodationism and wannabe whiteness. Historian Matthew Frye Jacobson attends to both threads, analyzing how industry norms, productions, scripts, roles, and audience expectations and responses were all framed by race against the backdrop of a changing America. In the spirit of better understanding Davis's life and career, Dancing Down the Barricades examines the complexities of his constraints, freedoms, and choices for what they reveal about Black history and American political culture.

  • av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    376,-

    "Dancing Down the Barricades reintroduces readers to Sammy Davis Jr., showing how he fashioned his world-renowned star performances in dance, music, stage drama, film, and television within complex and painfully exclusionary racially defined circumstances not of his own making. Matthew Frye Jacobson brilliantly illuminates the shape-shifting meanings of Davis's multiple performance strategies over the course of the 'long civil rights era, ' from the desegregation 1940s to the Black Power 1970s. Davis deployed his extraordinary talents as a weapon, in tandem with his contradictory public stances--from 'donating' celebrity support to Martin Luther King Jr.'s hard-fought campaigns to standing with Richard Nixon at the 1972 Republican National Convention. This is twentieth-century cultural history of the highest order."--Judith E. Smith, author of Becoming Belafonte: Black Artist, Public Radical "With Dancing Down the Barricades, Jacobson, one of our most astute historians, provides an extraordinary interpretation of the life and career of Sammy Davis Jr. In this extensive meditation on the cultural politics of the entertainment industry, Jacobson demonstrates how Davis's unparalleled talent and rise to stardom provide a lens through which to better understand twentieth-century American liberalism and its troubling relationship with race and racism. Jacobson's laser-sharp analysis yields new insight into the life of this complicated and compelling artist and public figure; in so doing, he makes Davis relevant to a whole new generation and some of the most urgent social and political challenges they face."--Farah Jasmine Griffin, author of Read Until You Understand: The Profound Wisdom of Black Life and Literature "Dancing Down the Barricades sheds new light on one of the most iconic twentieth-century American entertainers. Who but Jacobson could so adroitly and elegantly frame Sammy Davis Jr. within the 'contending forces' of American history while using this history to surface Davis's own human complexities? As Jacobson shows, we still have much to learn from Davis's redoubtable and confounding brilliance."--Gayle Wald, author of It's Been Beautiful: Soul! and Black Power Television "A rigorous, original, and bracing look at the complexities of Sammy Davis Jr.'s life and career. While Davis's legacy has often been maligned and misunderstood, Jacobson offers clear-eyed insights and correctives that reposition Davis as a key figure for understanding the racial fault lines and foundations of the US entertainment industry."--Josh Kun, author of The Autograph Book of L.A.: Improvements on the Page of the City "Dancing Down the Barricades is a virtuoso performance: a gimlet-eyed, wide-angled history of race, celebrity, and politics by one of the most talented historians of our day, focusing on one of the most enigmatic stars of stage and screen, on Hollywood and the entertainment industry, and on the tumultuous postwar era. This is the kind of big-hearted, ambitious history we should all be writing--and reading."--Matthew Pratt Guterl, author of Josephine Baker and the Rainbow Tribe "Jacobson has taken a deep dive into the life and work, dreams and demons of the enigmatic Sammy Davis Jr. and surfaces with a political history of race and popular culture for our time. By following Davis from the brightest stages to the darkest places, Dancing Down the Barricades shifts the underbelly of American culture from sideshow to center stage, casting new light on its dancing, smiling star. Turns out Mr. Show Business was the spoonful of sugar who helped ground glass go down, but he went down too. Superb."--Robin D.G. Kelley, author of Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Original

  • av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    406,-

    America's racial odyssey is the subject of this remarkable work of historical imagination. Matthew Frye Jacobson argues that race resides not in nature but in the contingencies of politics and culture. In ever-changing racial categories we glimpse the competing theories of history and collective destiny by which power has been organized and contested in the United States. Capturing the excitement of the new field of "e;whiteness studies"e; and linking it to traditional historical inquiry, Jacobson shows that in this nation of immigrants "e;race"e; has been at the core of civic assimilation: ethnic minorities, in becoming American, were re-racialized to become Caucasian.

  • - The Manchurian Candidate and Cold War America
    av Matthew Frye Jacobson & Gaspar Gonzalez
    300 - 740,-

    A reassessment of the landmark Cold War film, from Kennedy to Reagan to Halliburton.

  • - The Diasporic Imagination of Irish, Polish, and Jewish Immigrants in the United States
    av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    1 110,-

    Conventional wisdom would have us believe that every immigrant to the U.S. "became American," by choice and with deliberate speed. In this compelling revisionist study, Jacobsen reveals tenacious attachments to the Old World and explores the significance of homeland politics for Irish, Polish, and Jewish immigrants at the turn of the 20th century.

  • - The Diasporic Imagination of Irish, Polish, and Jewish Immigrants in the United States
    av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    536,-

    Suitable for readers who are accustomed to the self-congratulatory myth of America as a beacon of liberty to which the 'huddled masses' of the world look with longing.

  • - White Ethnic Revival in Post-Civil Rights America
    av Matthew Frye Jacobson
    496,-

    In the 1970s, whites mobilized around a new version of the epic tale of plucky immigrants in the New World. Although this turn to ethnicity was for many an individual search for familial and psychological identity, Jacobson establishes a broader white social and political consensus responding to the political language of the Civil Rights movement.

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