Theodor W. Adorno | Criticism

This literature criticism consists of approximately 42 pages of analysis & critique of Theodor W. Adorno.

Theodor W. Adorno | Criticism

This literature criticism consists of approximately 42 pages of analysis & critique of Theodor W. Adorno.
This section contains 11,256 words
(approx. 38 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Critical Essay by James M. Harding

SOURCE: “Adorno, Ellison, and the Critique of Jazz,” in Cultural Critique, Vol. 31, Fall, 1995, pp. 129-58.

In the following essay, Harding finds similarities between Adorno's ideas about jazz and those of Ralph Ellison's narrator in Invisible Man.

All totaled, Theodor Adorno wrote seven essays on jazz: three in the thirties, two in the forties, and two in the early fifties. His portrait of jazz was never flattering and was highly idiosyncratic. In the thirties, Adorno's criticisms of jazz functioned as the negative critical movement in what can be described as his dialectical embrace of Walter Benjamin's classic essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction” (Arato and Gebhardt 270; Daniel 41-42). For while a polemic against technology endures throughout Adorno's subsequent writing on jazz, extending well into the sixties and framing his discussion of jazz in Dissonanzen (1962), Thomas Levin has recently noted that even as far back...

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This section contains 11,256 words
(approx. 38 pages at 300 words per page)
Buy the Critical Essay by James M. Harding
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