"They have their music and we have ours": The Political Woody Guthrie
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| Publication date | 2019 |
| Journal | Popular music and society |
| Volume | Issue number | 42 | 3 |
| Pages (from-to) | 309-329 |
| Number of pages | 21 |
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| Abstract |
In the last decade, scholars of American history and culture have begun to examine the political project of Woody Guthrie, who has now taken up his long-predicted place in a national cultural canon. This essay seeks to build on that literature by offering a reading of Guthrie’s texts that is informed by radical theories as to the possibility and practice of cultural politics. It explores a political effort of considerable sophistication, which, when probed with Gramscian and other theoretical tools, brings out a radical strategy embedded in a vision of American culture and manifested in Guthrie’s trademark themes: from the hobo to the war effort, from contemporary working life to the history of labor. His voluminous output provides a basis for discussion among scholars interested in the cross-over between radical theory and cultural politics, even as its subsequent history raises questions as to the possibilities of radical culture itself.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1080/03007766.2018.1445801 |
| Downloads |
03007766.2018
(Final published version)
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