Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Gender & Popular Music this summer

More detail on Chris Robinson's summer course:

WGSS 396: Studies in Gender and American Popular Music
Notions of what it means to be a man or woman, what is considered masculine or feminine, and a musician’s gender, sexuality and race dictate not only how a musician constructs and perceives his or her own music and image, but also how the American public, their fans and the music industry perceive and accept or disavow the musician and their music. This course will examine the importance of, and the roles that gender, femininity and masculinity have played in shaping numerous aspects of 20th Century American popular music. Central to this course will be how gender roles and perceptions have been socially constructed and perpetuated in American culture. The intersectionality of race and gender will also play a central part in this course. As common gender paradigms change over time this course will place gender, masculinity and femininity in social and historical context to better understand the cultural processes at work. In addition to gender, power, politics and economics play crucial roles in shaping the discourse surrounding musicians, their music, and American cultural conceptions of gender. This interdisciplinary course will draw on disciplines, methods and approaches that include history, musicology, gender and race theory, English, African American Studies, Jazz Studies, semiotics and material culture studies.

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