some questions for the britshes:
1) is this really what punk was working against? because if this went out to 18m homes, and sold number ones, that is the story of punk defeating traditional middle class culture? i dont have my reynolds with me, but i do not remember he mentioning this?
2) why are the men blacked up and not the women?
3) Why was this so popular, between the stage shows, the traveling revue, the tv show, the singles, the albums, the charting--this was a massive success.
4) How do critics of pop integrate this kind of material into the narrative of the UK? If we are poptimists, is there a way of redeeming this? I mean Where Dead Voices Gather by Tosches has a connoisseur's taste, a crate digger's sense of history, and founding mythology to rest his rennovation of Emmet Miller on, if one was going to write about this, what lens would you use?
I am mostly thinking of Tom's upcoming entries on early 70s pop on poptimist, an the comments about the history of UK no. 1s, but anyone can pop in.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 09:05 am (UTC)It was always the other way round for me! I always got so infuriated with the UK posters just seeming...disingenuous and blinkered and ignorant when it came to matters of race, eg on that fucking Ronaldinho thread or whatever it was.
In many ways it's a huge shame that the UK has never had to question itself in ways that other countries, with huge and obvious sources of 'national shame' (slavery, Nazism, whatever), have had to do; because sweeping bad shit under the carpet, or just not even realising it's there, is really endemic to British culture.
As for minstrelsy I didn't even realise it was all that popular in the UK. My parents seem to take it for granted that minstrelsy = racist (and they're pretty conservative themselves). I don't think my grandmother would have watched it, though less for enlightened reasons than pure snobbery.
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 09:13 am (UTC)The story of the Minstrels is the story of *everyone* collectively realising that minstrelsy=racist!
no subject
Date: 2008-05-07 09:58 am (UTC)bcz blacking up was so widespread in a particular era -- including a handful of black performers who felt they had no option but to black up -- it became the repository for a wide range of elements of pop culture, good AND bad, and there's a bit of a pushback argument that its banishment has meant that some of these good elements were lost with the bad
no subject
Date: 2008-05-08 05:05 pm (UTC)Yes! There's the weird self-congratulatory thing about Britain being 'tolerant' that is wheeled out all the ruddy time, often in support of doing something *intolerant*.