Almost Like a Real Band: Navigating a Gendered Jazz Art World
Type of Work
Article
Date
2018
Journal Title
Qualitative Sociology
Journal ISSN
0162-0436
Journal Volume
41
Journal Issue
3
First Page
445
Last Page
471
DOI
10.1007/s11133-018-9388-9
Abstract
Professional jazz has been organized around two contradictory cultures. Historically, the jazz art world has followed norms of meritocracy, which promote equality across boundaries of race and class. At the same time a culture of exclusivity, anchored in gendered essentialism, has severely limited female participation. By analyzing interview data with artists from the Hamilton College Jazz Archive, we illustrate how these contradictory cultures of inclusion and exclusion operate to channel women into feminized roles in the jazz world. We then discuss how women employ a number of strategies to work around the culture of exclusivity and capitalize on the norms and values of musical meritocracy. Despite institutional openings in professional jazz that emerged following the women’s movement, female jazz artists continue to face strong barriers toward full equality in the jazz world. Although female artists consistently demonstrate that they possess equal musical skills to male musicians according to the norms of meritocracy that guide professional jazz, women remain on the margins of the jazz art world.
Citation Information
Wahl, Chelsea and Ellingson, Stephen, "Almost Like a Real Band: Navigating a Gendered Jazz Art World" (2018). Hamilton Digital Commons.
https://digitalcommons.hamilton.edu/articles/340
Hamilton Areas of Study
Sociology