Rocking in the Free World
Popular Music and the Politics of Freedom in Postwar America
Nicholas Tochka
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- ISBN:
- 9780197566510
- Published:
- 12 Sep 2023
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Progressive and libertarian, anti-Communist and revolutionary, Democratic and Republican, quintessentially American but simultaneously universal. By the late 1980s, rock music had acquired a dizzying array of political labels. These claims about its political significance shared one common thread: that the music could set you free.
Rocking in the Free World explains how Americans came to believe they had learned the truth about rock
'n' roll, a truth shaped by the Cold War anxieties of the Fifties, the countercultural revolutions (and counter-revolutions) of the Sixties and Seventies, and the end-of-history triumphalism of the Eighties. How
did rock 'n' roll become enmeshed with so many different competing ideas about freedom? And what does that story reveal about the promise-and the limits-of rock music as a political force in postwar America?
Preface and Acknowledgments Prologue: Popular Music as Political Theory 1 How Rock 'n' Roll Invented the Teenager 2 How Americans Rocked Cairo (and London, and Moscow, and Tehran, and ...) 3 How Trash Became Art 4 How the Rock Counterculture Dug Deeper 5 How Songwriters Revealed Our Inner Truth 6 How Rock Got Real Again 7 How We Taught the World to Sing Epilogue: Rocking in the Free World References Index
Nicholas Tochka , Associate Professor, University of Melbourne, UNITED STATES
Nicholas Tochka writes about the politics of postwar music-making in Eastern Europe and the Americas. In 2016, Oxford University Press published his first book, Audible States: Socialist Politics and Popular Music in Socialist Albania. He is currently completing one project on citizenship in postsocialist Europe, and another about the invention of the Sixties in the United States. He works at the Conservatorium of Music, the University of Melbourne in Australia, and plays both bass and guitar.
"Rocking in the Free World invites the reader to re-assess the mythical stories we tell about rock 'n' roll, freedom, and rebellion-and to see more accurately rock's artistic, social, and political impacts. Warmly recommended." -- Danielle Fosler-Lussier, author of Music in America's Cold War Diplomacy
"In Rocking in the Free World, Tochka (Conservatorium of Music, Univ. of Melbourne, Australia) discusses aspects of the evolution of the rock-and-roll style from its roots in the 1950s to the end of the 1980s...Recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals." -- Choice
"This book will be useful for those seeking to understand rock's position within the wider political landscape of its time, as well as how politics informed the public's perception of the music." -- Brian F. Wright, Notes: the Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association.
"Tochka's Rocking in the Free World such a worthwhile read." -- Benjamin Duke, EJAS Book Review