How have American writers written about jazz, and how has jazz
influenced American literature? In Fascinating Rhythm, David Yaffe
explores the relationship and interplay between jazz and literature,
looking at jazz musicians and the themes literature has garnered from
them by appropriating the style, tones, and innovations of jazz, and
demonstrating that the poetics of jazz has both been assimilated into,
and deeply affected, the development of twentieth-century American
literature.
Yaffe explores how Jewish novelists such as Norman Mailer, J. D.
Salinger, and Philip Roth engaged issues of racial, ethnic, and American
authenticity by way of jazz; how Ralph Ellison's descriptions of Louis
Armstrong led to a "neoconservative" movement in contemporary jazz; how
poets such as Wallace Stevens, Hart Crane, Langston Hughes, and Frank
O'Hara were variously inspired by the music; and how memoirs by Billie
Holiday, Charles Mingus, and Miles Davis both reinforced and redeemed
the red light origins of jazz. The book confronts the current jazz
discourse and shows how poets and novelists can be placed in it--often
with problematic results. Fascinating Rhythm stops to listen for the
music, demonstrating how jazz continues to speak for the American
writer.