With Amusement for All: A History of American Popular Culture since 1830 / Edition 1

With Amusement for All: A History of American Popular Culture since 1830 / Edition 1

by LeRoy Ashby
ISBN-10:
0813123976
ISBN-13:
9780813123974
Pub. Date:
05/12/2006
Publisher:
University Press of Kentucky
ISBN-10:
0813123976
ISBN-13:
9780813123974
Pub. Date:
05/12/2006
Publisher:
University Press of Kentucky
With Amusement for All: A History of American Popular Culture since 1830 / Edition 1

With Amusement for All: A History of American Popular Culture since 1830 / Edition 1

by LeRoy Ashby
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Overview

Popular culture is a central part of everyday life to many Americans. Personalities such as Elvis Presley, Oprah Winfrey, and Michael Jordan are more recognizable to many people than are most elected officials. With Amusement for All is the first comprehensive history of two centuries of mass entertainment in the United States, covering everything from the penny press to Playboy, the NBA to NASCAR, big band to hip hop, and other topics including film, comics, television, sports, dance, and music. Paying careful attention to matters of race, gender, class, technology, economics, and politics, LeRoy Ashby emphasizes the complex ways in which popular culture simultaneously reflects and transforms American culture, revealing that the world of entertainment constantly evolves as it tries to meet the demands of a diverse audience. Trends in popular entertainment often reveal the tensions between competing ideologies, appetites, and values in American society. For example, in the late nineteenth century, Americans embraced "self-made men" such as John D. Rockefeller and Andrew Carnegie: the celebrities of the day were circus tycoons P.T. Barnum and James A. Bailey, Wild West star "Buffalo Bill" Cody, professional baseball organizer Albert Spalding, and prizefighter John L. Sullivan. At the same time, however, several female performers challenged traditional notions of weak, frail Victorian women. Adah Isaacs Menken astonished crowds by wearing tights that made her appear nude while performing dangerous stunts on horseback, and the shows of the voluptuous burlesque group British Blondes often centered on provocative images of female sexual power and dominance. Ashby describes how history and politics frequently influence mainstream entertainment. When Native Americans, blacks, and other non-whites appeared in the nineteenth-century circuses and Wild West shows, it was often to perpetuate demeaning racial stereotypes—crowds jeered Sitting Bull at Cody's shows. By the early twentieth century, however, black minstrel acts reveled in racial tensions, reinforcing stereotypes while at the same time satirizing them and mocking racist attitudes before a predominantly white audience. Decades later, Red Foxx and Richard Pryor's profane comedy routines changed American entertainment. The raw ethnic material of Pryor's short-lived television show led to a series of African-American sitcoms in the 1980s that presented common American experiences—from family life to college life—with black casts. Mainstream entertainment has often co-opted and sanitized fringe amusements in an ongoing process of redefining the cultural center and its boundaries. Social control and respectability vied with the bold, erotic, sensational, and surprising, as entrepreneurs sought to manipulate the vagaries of the market, control shifting public appetites, and capitalize on campaigns to protect public morals. Rock 'n Roll was one such fringe culture; in the 1950s, Elvis blurred gender norms with his androgynous style and challenged conventions of public decency with his sexually-charged performances. By the end of the 1960s, Bob Dylan introduced the social consciousness of folk music into the rock scene, and The Beatles embraced hippie counter-culture. Don McLean's 1971 anthem "American Pie" served as an epitaph for rock's political core, which had been replaced by the spectacle of hard rock acts such as Kiss and Alice Cooper. While Rock 'n Roll did not lose its ability to shock, in less than three decades it became part of the established order that it had originally sought to challenge. With Amusement for All provides the context to what Americans have done for fun since 1830, showing the reciprocal nature of the relationships between social, political, economic, and cultural forces and the way in which the entertainment world has reflected, refracted, or reinforced the values those forces represent in America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813123974
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Publication date: 05/12/2006
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 712
Product dimensions: 6.13(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

LeRoy Ashby is Regents Professor and Claudius O. and Mary Johnson Distinguished Professor of History at Washington State University. He is the author of several books, including Fighting the Odds: The Life of Senator Frank Church and Endangered Children: Dependency, Neglect, and Abuse in American History.

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Paperback Edition vii

Preface xxxv

Prologue: Popular Culture on the Brink 1

1 Blackface, Barnum, and Newspaper Ballyhoo 11

2 Taming Rough Amusements, 1840s-l860s 41

3 Building an Entertainment Industry 73

4 "The Billion-Dollar Smile": From Burlesque to Vaudeville and Amusement Parks 107

5 The "Leisure Problem" at the Turn of the Century 143

6 Popular Culture and Middle-Class Respectability in the Early Twentieth Century 176

7 Battling the Great Depression 219

8 Building a Wartime Consensus in the 1940s and 1950s 263

9 Counterpoints to Consensus 302

10 Popular Culture and 1960s Ferment 348

11 Up for Grabs: Leaving the 1960s 394

12 A Pop Culture Society 441

Epilogue: Pop Culture in a Post-9/11 World 495

Notes 518

Bibliography 587

Index 613

Illustrations follow page 296

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