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Soundscapes of Liberation: A Conversation with Celeste Day Moore

Soundscapes of Liberation: A Conversation with Celeste Day Moore

FromBlack in Boston and Beyond


Soundscapes of Liberation: A Conversation with Celeste Day Moore

FromBlack in Boston and Beyond

ratings:
Length:
52 minutes
Released:
Sep 24, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In this episode, Dr. Hettie V. Williams discusses the sound of African American music in post-war France and within the larger African Diaspora with Dr. Celeste D. Moore. Williams is Director of the Trotter Institute at the University of Massachusetts at Boston and Moore is Associate Professor of History at Hamilton College in New York. Moore is a historian of African American culture, media, and Black internationalism in the twentieth century and her first book Soundscapes of Liberation: African American Mustic in Postwar France (Duke University Press, 2021) won the Chinard Prize from the Society of French Historical Studies. This conversation is focused on Moore’s award-winning book Soundscapes of Liberation and the ways that Black musicians engaging in identity-making processes in France and around the globe. Moore contends that popular Black music forms such as jazz facilitated new forms of power and protest in post-war France and the world. In her sweeping history, Moore interrogates a swath of sources including newspapers, music catalogs, magazines, recordings, images, memoirs, photographs and print media. For more information about Moore visit her website: Celeste D. Moore and to order her book visit here Duke University Press 
Released:
Sep 24, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (22)

This podcast explores the history, culture and experiences of the Black community in Boston, Massachusetts and beyond. It is hosted by Dr. Hettie V. Williams, Director of the Trotter Institute for the Study of Black Culture at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. The Trotter Institute was founded in 1984 to promote research/public policy initiatives on the Black community in Boston and it is named for Black activist, journalist, editor and business man William Monroe Trotter (1872-1934). Trotter was an agitator for social justice and it is for this reason that the Institute bears his name. Black in Boston is a show that profiles Black scholars and their allies, authors, community members and policy makers in the city of Boston and beyond.  See our store here: https://blackinboston.com/