Novel Sounds Novel Sounds

Novel Sounds

Southern Fiction in the Age of Rock and Roll

    • £23.99
    • £23.99

Publisher Description

The 1950s witnessed both the birth of both rock and roll and the creation of Southern literature as we know it. Around the time that Chuck Berry and Elvis Presley put their electric spin on Southern vernacular ballads, a canonical group of white American authors native to rock’s birthplace began to write fiction about the electrification of those ballads, translating into literary form key cultural changes that gave rise to the infectious music coming out of their region. In Novel Sounds, Florence Dore tells the story of how these forms of expression became intertwined and shows how Southern writers turned to rock music and its technologies—tape, radio, vinyl—to develop the “rock novel.”

Dore considers the work of Southern writers like William Faulkner, Flannery O’Connor, and William Styron alongside the music of Bessie Smith, Lead Belly, and Bob Dylan to uncover deep historical links between rock and Southern literature. Along with rock pioneers, Southern authors drew from blues, country, jazz, and other forms to create a new brand of realism that redefined the Southern vernacular as global, electric, and notably white. Resurrecting this Southern literary tradition at the birth of rock, Dore clarifies the surprising but unmistakable influence of rock and roll on the American novel. Along the way, she explains how literature came to resemble rock and roll, an anti-institutional art form if there ever was one, at the very moment academics claimed literature for the institution.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2018
12 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
200
Pages
PUBLISHER
Columbia University Press
SIZE
3.4
MB

More Books Like This

Modernism's Metronome Modernism's Metronome
2020
Everyday Reading Everyday Reading
2012
Epistrophies Epistrophies
2017
Was Huck Black? Was Huck Black?
1994
Intricate Thicket Intricate Thicket
2015
An Open Map An Open Map
2017