‘We try to have the best’: How nationality, race and gender structure artists’ circulations in the Paris jazz scene
Issue: Vol 10 No. 1-2 (2016)
Journal: Jazz Research Journal
Subject Areas: Popular Music
DOI: 10.1558/jazz.v10i1-2.28344
Abstract:
This article examines how international circulations of jazz artists in the Parisian jazz scene are structured by hierarchies based on the artists’ nationalities, gender and ‘race’. To do so, the author first describes which artists are showcased in the capital’s clubs and festivals in terms of gender, nationality and country of residence. This shows that the well-known venues in Paris book (male) American rather than French or other artists, and that their added symbolic value is simultaneously economic. Finally, the article centres on how the artists are presented in two specific festivals, revealing that even though ‘otherness’ and value are constructed along racial and gendered divides, they are also informed by artists’ nationality. Indeed, the dominant position of the United States and the opposition between the Western world and the global South are strongly dramatized within jazz in France, which shows some proximity to the ‘world music’ scene.
Author: Myrtille Picaud
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