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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.21857/mwo1vcjk1y

Oscar Hammerstein II and the Performativity of Race and Intersectional Oppression in American Musicals from Show Boat (1927) to Carousel (1945)

William A. Everett ; University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance Grant Hall, Kansas City, USA


Full text: english pdf 367 Kb

page 355-375

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Abstract

Oscar Hammerstein II (1895-1960), with various collaborators, addressed issues of race and intersectional oppression (here defined as multiple features that can contribute to oppression either socially or individually, and can include factors such as race, age, gender, and social class) in many of his works. This essay investigates such representations in Show Boat (1927, music by Jerome Kern), The New Moon (1928, music by Sigmund Romberg), Sunny River (1941, music by Romberg), Oklahoma! (1943, music by Richard Rodgers), and Carousel (1945, music by Rodgers) as well as selected twenty-first century revivals of Oklahoma! and Carousel. In each show, white hegemony is the norm, and characters of color, if they appear, represent some sort of difference that is made subservient to the white norm. In selected modern revivals, multicultural casting brings such issues, including negative stereotypes, to the fore and allows for new insights into issues of race and intersectional oppression.

Keywords

Oscar Hammerstein II; Jerome Kern; Sigmund Romberg; Richard Rodgers; race; intersectional oppression; Show Boat; The New Moon; Sunny River; Oklahoma!; Carousel

Hrčak ID:

234091

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/234091

Publication date:

6.12.2019.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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