Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4230607486> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 58 of
58
with 100 items per page.
- W4230607486 endingPage "19" @default.
- W4230607486 startingPage "17" @default.
- W4230607486 abstract "January/February 2007 Historically Speaking 17 Why Elvis? Michael T. Bertrand Elvis. A surname almost seems redundant. No one ever asks Elvis who? or Who's Elvis? Many, however, have persistently asked or wondered, Why Elvis? Or, intoned widi a different emphasis, Why Elvis?' On the surface, no matter what the intonation, it is a rather straightforward two-part question. The first component involves the social conditions responsible for Presley's emergence, and the second concerns the performer's historical relevance. Yet embedded within the inquiry are several issues tied to race, region, class, taste, gender, and generation that make die question a politically charged or loaded one. Responses to it reflect similar tensions. Why Elvis? at die top of this essay, for instance, may have elicited as much exasperation as it did delight. Several readers indeed may have turned back to the front page to make sure they had not mistakenly grabbed their NationalEnquirer , while others may have irritably shouted above the Beethoven booming from their office jam box, Why not Chuck Berry? Whatever the response, it is doubtful that the question provoked nothing. For, beginning widi his arrival on the national scene in the mid-1950s, Presley has maintained a constant, controversial presence in American life, a perseverance that even his dying could not defy. In 1 958, for instance, two writers who surely did not anticipate die longevity of their counsel , fittingly proclaimed that as a subject for polemic, Elvis Presley has few peers. Their assessment was not terribly immoderate; an earlier recommendation had advocated angrily that Elvis the Pelvis belongs in the jungle. Many definitely agreed that he simply did not belong. Widely syndicated Chicago columnist Mike Royko's disapproving epitaph upon Presley's untimely death at 42 ultimately registered a widespread contempt and loathing for the soudiern white working-class culture the singer personified: Elvis pulled off a marvelous con. There he was, a Depression -born, unread hillbilly, a marginally-talented pop singer who promoted a limited talent into a vast fortune .... I think what Presley's success really proves is that the majority of Americans, while fine, decent people, have lousy taste in music.1 To many, Royko's inference that Elvis reigned as the king of white-trash culture merely stated the obvious. Two years following his death, one scholar noted diat to appreciate or like Presley was suspect, a lapse of taste. It put one in beehives and leisure suits, in company with 'necrophiliacs' and odier weird sorts. By the middle of the next decade, one of the biggest selling biographies in the history of publishing (Elvisby Albert Goldman) portrayed the ex-truck driver as a redneck with savage appetites and [a] perverted mentality and of no musical significance to American culture. And as the 1 980s gave way to the 1990s, the media transformed the former poster child Elvis Presley performing with Bill Black, January 1, 1955.© Sunset Boulevard/Corbis. for adolescent rebellion into a national joke, a cultureless icon whose cultural consequence had been reduced to an ironically flawed (not to mention tacky) exhibition pitting a skinny Elvis (likeness from the 1950s weighing approximately 175 pounds) against a fat Elvis (an image from a 1973 Hawaii satellite program in which a slimmed-down Presley tipped the scales at about 1 65—Elvis had apparendy just gone on a crash diet) for the honor of gracing a decidedly non-iconoclastic commemorative postage stamp. Once likened to a jug of corn liquor at a champagne party, the hip-swiveling Hillbilly Cat-turned-Bmovie star-turned-Las Vegas spectacle clearly never obtained the credentials necessary to attain legitimacy and rise above caricature. As Jon Wiener has noted: To die mainstream, the culture Elvis came out of was dumb and degraded, and Elvis was a stupid hillbilly , a redneck who came from white trash. Indeed, according to Simon Frith, Presley was not just working class but, worse, southern working class, [the object of] a class contempt which, among other things, assumed that someone like Elvis was incapable of artistry.2 Historians have frequently assumed that someone like Elvis also proved incapable of achieving historical significance. After all, he was, as William Leuchtenburg once pronounced..." @default.
- W4230607486 created "2022-05-11" @default.
- W4230607486 creator A5076228979 @default.
- W4230607486 date "2007-01-01" @default.
- W4230607486 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W4230607486 title "Why Elvis?" @default.
- W4230607486 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/hsp.2007.0029" @default.
- W4230607486 hasPublicationYear "2007" @default.
- W4230607486 type Work @default.
- W4230607486 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W4230607486 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4230607486 hasAuthorship W4230607486A5076228979 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C136815107 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C154945302 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C2777212361 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C2777855551 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C29595303 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C107038049 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C111472728 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C136764020 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C136815107 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C138885662 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C142362112 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C144024400 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C154945302 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C2777212361 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C2777855551 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C29595303 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C41008148 @default.
- W4230607486 hasConceptScore W4230607486C95457728 @default.
- W4230607486 hasIssue "3" @default.
- W4230607486 hasLocation W42306074861 @default.
- W4230607486 hasOpenAccess W4230607486 @default.
- W4230607486 hasPrimaryLocation W42306074861 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2087400982 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2088537761 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2349196250 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2364032619 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2373213250 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2391412104 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2990361855 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W4236026324 @default.
- W4230607486 hasRelatedWork W2255385957 @default.
- W4230607486 hasVolume "8" @default.
- W4230607486 isParatext "false" @default.
- W4230607486 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W4230607486 workType "article" @default.