
The Early Twentieth Century Ushered In An Exciting Wave Of Avant-garde Artistic Innovation. While Igor Stravinsky Was Thinking About New Ways Of Interpreting Sound, Pablo Picasso Was Exploring New Ways Of Representing The Figure, And Coco Chanel Was Giving Women A New Sense Of Style. Within This Moment Of Avant-garde Change, Few Recognised Black Women Artistes And Intellectuals Who Were Also Driving Cultural Innovation And Were Agents Of Moulding And Shaping Western Culture And Society. This Book Uncovers The Forgotten Story Of One Such Woman Called Elsie Houston - A Mixed Race, Brazilian, Classically-trained Soprano. Following Her Artistic And Social Networks From Brazil To Paris And Then On To New York, This Book Opens The Door To An Unexpected History Of Race, Sexuality, And Society During The Twentieth Century. Elsie Captured The 1920s And 1930s Western Artistic Vogue For Black Exotica By Restylizing Afro-brazilian Folk Songs On Elite Stages. In Paris, She Became The Ultimate Flapper Girl: She Performed In One Of The City's Risqué Nudist Cabarets; Moved In The Same Social Circles As The Likes Of Josephine Baker; Became A Muse For Man Ray; And Engaged The Same Political Sphere As The Trotskyists. Moving To New York City In 1937, The Press Branded Her Folk Songs As 'voodoo' And She Was Part Of A Bohemian Set Of Figures Who Were Connected To The Harlem Renaissance Such As Carl Van Vechten And Virgil Thomson. Elsie Reconceptualized Black Music, In Particular Afro-brazilian Music, As Modern And Cosmopolitan-- Provided By Publisher.
This biography investigates the life and cultural impact of Elsie Houston, a Brazilian soprano whose contributions to twentieth-century avant-garde music and performance have been largely overlooked. Adjoa Osei utilizes archival research and social network analysis to reconstruct Houston's trajectory from Brazil to the elite stages of Paris and New York. The author argues that Houston served as a pivotal agent in the modernization of Afro-Brazilian folk music, positioning her as a central figure in the intersection of race, sexuality, and artistic innovation during the 1920s and 1930s.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of transnational Black performance and the history of the Harlem Renaissance. Readers frequently note the meticulous archival detail provided by Osei, which effectively contextualizes Houston's career within the broader framework of modernism.
Page Count:
200
Publication Date:
2025-01-21
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197693172
ISBN-13:
9780197693179
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