American Allegory: Lindy Hop and the Racial Imagination
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In American Allegory, Black Hawk Hancock offers an embedded and embodied ethnography that situates dance within a larger Chicago landscape of segregated social practices. Delving into two Chicago dance worlds, the Lindy and Steppin’, Hancock uses a combination of participant-observation and interviews to bring to the surface the racial tension that surrounds white use of black cultural forms. Focusing on new forms of appropriation in an era of multiculturalism, Hancock underscores the institutionalization of racial disparities and offers wonderful insights into the intersection of race and culture in America.
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American Allegory - Black Hawk Hancock
Black Hawk Hancock is assistant professor of sociology at DePaul University. He is coauthor of Changing Theories: New Directions in Sociology.
The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637
The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London
© 2013 by The University of Chicago
All rights reserved. Published 2013.
Printed in the United States of America
22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 1 2 3 4 5
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-04307-4 (cloth)
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-04310-4 (paper)
ISBN-13: 978-0-226-04324-1 (e-book)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hancock, Black Hawk, 1971–
American allegory : Lindy hop and the racial imagination / Black Hawk Hancock.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-226-04307-4 (cloth: alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-226-04310-4 (pbk.: alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-226-04324-1 (ebk.)
1. African Americans—Illinois—Chicago—Social conditions—20th century. 2. Chicago (Il.)—Race relations—History—20th century. 3. Blacks—Race identity—Illinois—Chicago—History—20th century. 4. Whites—Race identity—Illinois—Chicago—History—20th century. 5. Lindy (Dance)—Illinois—Chicago—History—20th century. I. Title.
E185.86.H285 2013
305.896'073077311—dc23
2012044800
This paper meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (Permanence of Paper).
AMERICAN ALLEGORY
Lindy Hop and the Racial Imagination
BLACK HAWK HANCOCK
The University of Chicago Press
Chicago and London
For Nana and Ghee with all my love and gratitude.
(Elizabeth Betty
Warren and Everett Ebb
Warren)
A . . . major problem, and one that is indispensable to the centralization and direction of power, is that of learning the meaning of myths and symbols which abound among the Negro masses. For without this knowledge, Leadership, no matter how correct its program, will fail. Much in Negro life remains a mystery; perhaps the zoot suit conceals profound political meaning; perhaps the symmetrical frenzy of the Lindy-hop conceals clues to great potential powers, if only leaders could solve this riddle.
Ralph Ellison
CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Prologue: This Strange Dance
Lead In: The Cost of Insight
Introduction: The Lindy Hop Revival
1. Finding the Pocket
2. Caught in the Act of Appropriation
3. Put a Little Color on That!
4. Steppin’ Out of Whiteness
Lead Out: Learning How to Make Life Swing
Conclusion: Toward New Territory
Notes
References
Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Originally, writing a book on the Lindy Hop was not my intent. Even after a year of dance education, I never considered the Lindy Hop as a possible topic of intellectual inquiry. In fact, in one of my earliest dance classes, my first dance instructor suggested that I write about the Lindy Hop. I laughed off his remark and never gave it a second thought. As a result, my initial reflections on the Lindy Hop were not instrumentally motivated for research purposes, but instead were an outcome of my passion for the fascinating new world in which I found myself. It has been said that if one intellectualizes one’s passion, then the passion withers away. If it were not for all the wonderful dancers, musicians, and other people I met during my time dancing that might have been the case. Instead, their friendship and camaraderie fueled my desire and propelled me into worlds I could never have imagined.
While the pursuit of the Lindy Hop took me from off the coast of Los Angeles to the outposts of Sweden, a word about my home, Chicago, is necessary. While generations of dancers have come up after us and carry on the dance, to be part of that rising tide of the Lindy Hop revival, to help institutionalize it here, makes all the years of working through this project worthwhile. To the bar owners who let us dance in their aisles, to the clubs that would let us clear tables to extend their dance floors, the Lindy Hop resonated deeply with the already rich dance and music traditions of Chicago. While many have moved on from the dance, and several of the best dance venues have shuttered or now bear different names, a more fertile soil could not have been asked for to nurture this dance and watch it bloom.
In order to make an attempt at acknowledging all those who came into my life over the years, it is necessary to retrace some of the major steps of the seemingly circuitous route that American Allegory took on the way to its fruition. It is worth recounting some of these seminal moments here, so as to try and account for as many people as possible who influenced me along the way. To all who passed through my life during this journey, and to those who I apologetically have forgotten to mention here, my deepest gratitude.
American Allegory began in the fall of 1997 when, as a third-year graduate student at Wisconsin, I moved from Madison to Chicago, to take classes at the University of Chicago. Without a graduate cohort or concrete institutional support, I was forced to eke out a social existence on my own in a new city. Shortly after my arrival in Chicago, I was introduced to the Lindy Hop subculture. While an academic by day, by night I was plunging myself into the then-exploding world of Lindy Hop and the retro revival culture that came with it. Within weeks of my arrival I had sifted through the dozens of dance studios offering Swing dance, to find Swing-Out Chicago. By the end of September that year I was enrolled in dance classes twice a week and social dancing as often as I could on the other nights. I started taking as many classes as possible and came to know—among others who shaped my initial dancing—Howard Bregman, Dana Cygan, Penny Huddleston, Julee Mertz, Andrew Twiss, Nicole Wood, and Chris Yee. Looking back on those early days at St. Alphonsus Church, I don’t think any of us realized just what it all meant. A thank you to John Schmitz for all your support of our dance endeavors there. From lessons to practice session, to performance rehearsals, you were always giving up another fifteen minutes for us to finish.
My academic year at U of C blew by as dance became my all-consuming passion. By June 1998 I had gathered enough skill and fascination that I packed my bags and headed off to Catalina Island for Swing Camp Catalina, where I was to take classes with the greatest Lindy Hoppers from all over the world. It was that summer that I took class with the legendary Frankie Manning, who at the time was eighty-four years old, considered one of the greatest dancers (and one of the originators) of the Lindy Hop. Dancing to live big bands at night, looking out the open windows of Catalina’s Casino Ballroom onto Avalon Bay and across the Pacific Ocean, were nights that could only be described as sublime. Thank you to Erin and Tami Stevens for putting together the granddaddy of all American Swing dance camps and for an unrelenting focus on celebrating the beauty and aesthetics of dance in one of the world’s most picturesque settings.
Having spent the previous year taking classes in Chicago, I was still obligated to fulfill two remaining courses in Madison. Therefore, rather than moving back, I made the weekly commute from Chicago during the fall of 1998 working closely with communication arts professor John Fiske. It was out of our weekly Wednesday conversations, fueled by the Living Room’s most very ordinary red wine, that John and I rehashed my tales of the dance world and the life I was leading far from the halls of academia. It was out of those conversations, which were cross-cut with the canon of cultural studies, that he convinced me that I had already discovered my research project without even knowing it. What would have been considered laughable years before suddenly took hold and the worlds of sociology and cultural studies melded into one. Without the enthusiasm and encouragement of John Fiske, there would be no American Allegory. Encouraged by John to get these ideas out into the public arena, I went off to Portland, Oregon, for the Pacific Sociological Association meetings in April 1999, my first professional conference, delivering three different papers on my initial ideas for a study on the Lindy Hop (which at the time was heavily inspired by the work of Bourdieu and covered everything from historical analysis, to issues of social space, to issues of cultural appropriation and embodiment, and the transmission of culture across racialized bodies). Following up on that, at the tail end of that academic year, at Fiske’s invite, I traveled again up to Madison, to present what was the first coherent proposal of the overall project to my peers, at the Graduate Student Colloquium in Communication Arts.
Out of the feedback I received from my trip to Portland and the overwhelming constructive feedback from the Colloquium, the summer of 1999 marked what was a cross-continental whirlwind of fieldwork that took me back to Catalina, to Los Angeles to Toronto, to Boston, and on to Minneapolis. During this time I met with all the primary revivalists: Steven Mitchell, David Dalmo, Lennart Westerlund, Eddie Jansson and Eva Lagerqvist, Ryan Francois and Jenny Thomas, Virginie Jensen, Kenneth and Helena Norbelie, as well as spending time with the members of dance troupes the Rhythm Hot Shots and Shout-n-Feel-It! (among others), who set me on my way with their insights and suggestions for my research. A special nod to Steven Mitchell here: from our first meeting with a makeshift mocha and a jaundiced eye toward my initial questions, to those ongoing conversations ever since, in the strangest packages come those who are darker than Blue.
Following through on John Fiske’s recommendation, I again made the commute from Chicago to Madison, and sat in on Ronald Radano’s Black Cultural Studies seminar in the fall of 1999. It was here that Ron introduced me to the nonfiction work of Ralph Ellison, which proved to be the theoretical turning point in my thinking, and through which everything else was to filter. To Ron I owe an ongoing debt of gratitude for his unending generosity for clearing time for coffee and conversation on spur-of-the-moment trips to Madison over the years that followed. In addition to the intricacies of Ellison’s thought, Ron taught me to listen to those elements that other ethnographers only see. If there is any musical quality to my work, it is indebted to Ron. Fall of ’99 also brought another trip to Los Angeles, where I studied dance with Josie Say, spent an afternoon on Erin Steven’s spacious porch listening to her recount her central role in the Lindy Hop revival of the 1980s, and was escorted around the LA scene by veteran Lindy Hopper and gracious hostess Sophie Lim.
Summer 2000 took me to Herrang, Sweden (population 422), located along the coast at the bay Singöfjärden about an hour and a half from Stockholm to the famous Herrang Dance Camp, where for three weeks I trained, interviewed, wrote, and discovered the reach of Eminem in a global world. To Angela Andrews, Paul Overton and Sharon Ashe, Mattias Lundmark and Asa Palm, Catrine Ljunggren, Rob and Diane van Haaren, my classmates, and all the others that offered your time and your unsolicited opinions about me and my project
I thank you. Finally, a special thank you to Kenneth and Helena Norbelie, who opened their home, their dance studio, and theirs hearts to me: for showing me Stockholm and the Swedish way to do things—Skål för Fan!
While my entry into the world of Steppin’ didn’t occur until summer of 2001, almost four years after I started to Lindy Hop, being an expert dancer eased my transition into that scene in ways that may have made a beginner’s experience much different. To be able to have participated in one of the most distinctive of all Chicago cultural practices, as Steppin’ in Chicago’s own particular contemporary stylized form of the Lindy Hop, has made living in Chicago all that much richer an experience. Again, as my immersion into this dance culture was out of my attraction to the dance, and only later was something I drew upon for this book, crisscrossing back and forth between the worlds of the Lindy Hop and Steppin’ not only provided an ideal comparative study, it provided a way to expand my dancing repertoire and elevate my dance skills to an entirely new level. A huge shout-out to all the Steppers who took me in, broke bread, showed me love, had my back, and introduced me to some of the finest dance venues and DJs Chicago will ever know: 3G’s, Mr. G’s, Legend’s, and the (old) East of the Ryan. For all your generosity, I hope you find your kindness reflected back here.
I could never have completed this book without the advice of my mentors Chas Camic, Mustafa Emirbayer, Phillip Gorski, Mara Loveman, and Ronald Radano. They were so receptive to such an unusual project and allowed it to unfold with as much leeway as needed. Each one of you brought something unique to the book. I hope you find your support and encouragement echoing throughout.
Beyond these important markers of American Allegory, it is necessary to thank all the friends who helped me through the early days of working on this book and talked me down from the bell tower: Gianpaolo Baiocchi, Brad Manzolillo, Ron Mize, Dan Steward, and Josh Whitford. A special recognition goes out to Tanarra Schneider for her friendship, inspiration, and support. She was a guiding voice in keeping me straight, or at least straightish
over the years. To Harry Saito, a perfect partner in crime on so many adventures. Julie Siragusa deserves special mention as the greatest dance partner I have ever known, and as a friend who helped me through my darkest days to get the book into its final form, I owe you more than I can ever say. To Paul Stern, my wartime consigliere. A very special shout-out to David Yamane and Big Slappy for having my back since day one—people’s for life—your support has meant everything.
Javier Auyero deserves credit for helping me forge my most challenging article, articulating both theoretical and methodological aspects of the ethnographic process into a coherent vision in Qualitative Sociology 30 (2007). Thank you for all your guidance navigating those ethnographic waters. Loïc Wacquant also deserves special recognition; he provoked, prodded, and raised the bar in terms of what was not only acceptable, but demanded of good ethnography. From our first meeting back in 1994 to today, his support has been tireless.
Chas Camic deserves special recognition for his unflagging support through my highs and lows, my successes and the failures, along the way. Upon my arrival in Madison, Chas’s couch served as my lone point of refuge in an otherwise unrelenting storm of hostility. Despite my sometimes questionable choices, such as that brilliant insight
I had into the work of Bataille or why Roland Barthes was the greatest undiscovered
sociologist of the late twentieth century, he never left my side or abandoned his faith in me. Over the last several years it has been his guiding support and wisdom that have allowed me to bring American Allegory from possibility to print. During the redrafting of the book, I was asked once why a theorist had such a gravitational pull on my ethnographic work. I responded that if one could undertake historical-contextual work, such as the type Chas Camic does, and wander around the nineteenth century long enough until one found something of significance, then he more than anyone else could grasp and guide a project as mundane as the Lindy Hop.
Two reviewers for the University of Chicago Press provided invaluable feedback that improved the book immeasurably. Finally, a special acknowledgment to the man who provided the backbeat of American Allegory, editor-drummer/drummer-editor Douglas Mitchell. Upon our very first meeting, he has not only laid time, but knew when to take the lead and change up the tempo. If a dancer can only express himself within the pocket he is given, then Doug Mitchell is the Jo Jones of editors.
PROLOGUE: THIS STRANGE DANCE
Minstrelsy was the beginning of a long relationship between blacks and whites and black entertainment and white appropriation of it . . . and this strange dance that we’ve been doing with each other since, really, the beginning of our relationship in America. It’s too close; it’s too deep a story, so you have to degrade the relationship.
Wynton Marsalis
Despite his racial difference and social status, something indisputably American about Negroes not only raised doubts about the white man’s values system but aroused the troubling suspicion that whatever else the true American is, he is also somehow part black.
Ralph Ellison
. . .
As I waited in the long line for admission to Club Liquid, the sounds of Swing and jump blues billowed past the red velvet curtains into the dimly lit atrium. Dozens of Swing kids
clad in fedoras and two-tone shoes awaited entry into the club. Beyond the curtain was an undulating sea of bodies in motion; socialites, dancers, and musicians were ready to dance until the wee hours. Cocooned red globes dangled from the ceiling; their luminous glow was just bright enough to soften the glare of the glittering martini glasses and small white candles that flickered like fireflies across the bar. A thick haze of cigarette and cigar smoke encircled the patrons anchoring the long oak bar along the left side of the club. The barstools were packed and the crowd around them was two rows deep, trying desperately to get the attention of the black-vested bartenders pouring Cosmopolitans and Manhattans. Down at the end of the bar, at the back of the room, lay the brightly lit stage and the vast parquet dance floor, where a myriad of colors and shapes twirled, twisted, and spun. Here, hundreds of Swing kids were dancing the Lindy Hop to the sounds of a dozen musicians beating out the charts from Basie and Ellington to Goodman and Henderson.
Amid the flurry of movement and congestion of people, above the fedoras and coiffed hair, I saw a woman doing the splits as she was lift ed into the air, her skirt splaying out around her. Another woman was tossed over her partner’s head to wild crowd applause. At the back corner of the dance floor, a group of people bobbing, weaving, and cheering formed a wall with their backs to the rest of the dancers. The main attraction was there in the jam
circle, where the great Lindy Hoppers held court, challenging each other and demonstrating their latest tricks and turns.
As I made my way through the club, I noticed that all of the tables were completely filled; there was standing room only. Men in pinstripe suits with the drape shape
and reet pleats
socialized with women in cocktail dresses and small pillbox hats. Tonight, everyone was here for the Lindy Hop scene. Whether drinker, dancer, or barfly, they all circulated around the Lindy Hop, the original Swing dance that emerged from its more famously remembered precursor, the Charleston, in the ballrooms of Harlem in the late 1920s. This was the dance night of the week at the most popular club in town; tonight more than 800 people would come through the doors in search of Swing dancing and the scene that accompanied the latest craze captivating the nation. That night the club was at a fever pitch of excitement, with every hep cat eyeing each other’s latest fashions and dance steps.
At the edge of the dance floor, a barrier of bodies congregated two to three deep in places. They served as a human wall, encircling the dance floor and those dancers inside it. This porous wall of bodies functioned as the intersection of activity in the club; some were drinking, some smoking, some watching silently, others were cheering and clapping to the music with enthusiasm, and still others were waiting to get on the floor when space cleared. Over the top of the crowd, the band was stomping and jumping; their glistening horns trumpeted out swinging jazz and blues as the rhythm section pounded out the heavy syncopated backbeat. The band members’ bold geometric-patterned ties and dark suits bopped and swayed in unison as they took the already excited crowd to its peak with an encore rendition of Basie’s signature Corner Pocket.
Bodies jumped, spun, twisted, and glided all over the dance floor. Moving in unison, they did variations of the Charleston, Shimmy, Black Bottom, Boogie, and Texas Tommy and performed all the other variations of the Lindy Hop, the dance that Life magazine once billed as America’s True National Folk Dance.
The eye-dazzling movement of partners changing places and spinning around each other manifested the physicality, sweat, energy, and excitement of hundreds of people on the dance floor connecting through social dancing. The black and white two-tones, the crisp white shirts, the zoot suits, the pinstripes, the fedoras, the billowing dresses, the lace, the twirling crinoline all decorated the swirling bodies as if this were a large staged choreography. But it was not. I had entered the world of the Lindy Hop, the original Swing dance.
. . .
This description could have been given by Malcolm X after a visit to the Roseland Ballroom. It could be an account by one of the dancers at the Savoy in Harlem sixty years ago.¹ But fascinatingly enough, this was my initial experience with the Swing dance scene in contemporary Chicago. After moving to Chicago from Madison, I was captivated by this subculture upon my first encounter with it. This fascination has led not only to a PhD dissertation, but also to an ongoing dance education through my personal struggle to master one of the most elusive of social dances, the Lindy Hop. I have never been comfortable separating my personal and professional lives, and the Lindy Hop subculture immediately yielded both a social and a sociologically fascinating world in which I immersed myself completely. There is something both romantic and nostalgic in the sight of hundreds of young people outfitted in suits and dresses, dancing to the music their grandparents called popular
the first time it came around in the late 1920s, ’30s, and ’40s. That night at Club Liquid was not a costume party or an isolated special event. This was the subculture of the Swing dance revival, alive and thriving in the city of Chicago, across the nation, and all over the world.
On closer inspection, something unsettling emerges within this beauty. Club Liquid is not an African American club in Harlem, but a contemporary predominantly white club in the North Side of Chicago. What was once an African American cultural practice—forged as an alternative expression of identity against the context of overt and explicit white racism, segregation, and exploitation that defined the American landscape at the time—has now become the tribal call of the privileged white middle class.² As Kobena Mercer writes, In the high energy dance styles that might accompany the beat, the Lindy Hop and Jitterbug traced another line of flight: through the catharsis of the dance a momentary release might be obtained from all the pressures on mind and body accumulated under the ritual discriminations of racism
(Mercer 1994, 431). Ironically, where once whites had to travel uptown to black parts of New York City to Swing dance in the Savoy Ballroom—as the famous Savoy Lindy Hop dancer Norma Miller remarked, White people had to come to Harlem to learn how to Swing. The Savoy was the home of black dancing; it was the home of Swing
—now African Americans must travel to white parts of town to dance the Lindy Hop to Swing music (quoted in Burns 2000). This ironic twist forces us to think about the relationships among race, culture, and identity in contemporary American society. As Ralph Ellison pointed out seventy years ago, our everyday cultural forms are larger and more important than they appear. Something as commonplace as the Lindy Hop, in its symmetrical frenzy, could hold clues to great potential powers for understanding who we really are. For Ellison, it was in these forms and practices our lives are lived and histories recorded. To come to terms with this irony is to come to terms with what the Lindy Hop is—an American allegory waiting to be told.³
LEAD IN: THE COST OF INSIGHT
Perhaps we are able to see only that which we are prepared to see, and in our culture, the cost of insight is an uncertainty that threatens our already unstable sense of order and requires a constant questioning of accepted assumptions.
Ralph Ellison (1995a, 31)
Seven years of experience with the Lindy Hop as an observer, participant, and teacher—and then later, my interest in the Chicago Steppin’ scene—resulted in the culmination of this book. This project was not simply one of participation or observation, but involved my immersion in the deepest levels of these communities as an embedded and embodied ethnographer; I participated in all aspects of the Lindy Hop dance culture and became a regular social dancer in the Chicago Steppin’ world. The work itself is the confluence of three narratives: (1) a historical narrative of my immersion in and passage through the Lindy Hop and Steppin’ worlds; (2) a personal narrative of my own development as a student of dance, as a scholar, and as an individual; and (3) a theoretical and methodological narrative that develops my experiences and approaches in the field to larger studies of race, culture, and identity.
Learning to dance the Lindy Hop was a unique experience. I showed up to my first class alone, without knowing a soul in Chicago. Because I had never danced before, except for a brief flirtation with break-dancing in my youth, I didn’t think of myself as a dancer. I never dreamed I would invest years of my life in studying dance, let alone go on to teach and perform it or undertake writing a book on it. As I delved into the Lindy Hop for several years, I spent anywhere from four to seven nights a week dancing, taking classes, teaching, practicing, and performing. Over the years, I watched myself transform from someone uncomfortable moving in his own skin into someone who is fully comfortable with his own bodily movements. This transformation has forever changed me as a scholar and as a person. In fact, without this transformation, the study that emerged could never have been completed.
When I was debating whether or not to pursue an ethnography on this dance culture, I had a memorable encounter with a fellow graduate student. I confided to him that I was uneasy about doing this project because I was initially not a good dancer and feared this would undermine my credibility when discussing the dance. He told me that it was not important for me to be a good dancer because I was there simply to observe and interview people. Most sociologists would not view the mastery of the dance as necessary for writing an ethnography, because dancers are not the sociologist’s target audience. The graduate student argued that sociologists would be my audience, and they would not care about my skills as a dancer. His response mirrored the traditional problems that confront researchers in the social sciences about the relationship between insider and outsider status in relation to one’s work.
For example, the African American community has long been skeptical of the field of sociology for this very reason. Historically, African Americans have been suspicious of commentators or scientists who claim to be experts on their culture. Their distrust stems from the fact that traditionally scholars, especially white scholars, have been detached; they have lacked the competence and the practical knowledge of African American culture.
This student’s comments propelled me in the opposite direction. I felt compelled to become a student of the dance and learn as much as I could, so that my perspective and thoughts would come not from a novice dancer and detached observer of the scene, but from a true student, teacher, and full participant in this culture. In hindsight, the path I chose was the only way I could have proceeded with my project. Without paying my dues and mastering the dance, I could not have had access to the major players or been able to discuss intimate issues and ideas concerning the Lindy Hop and Steppin’ scenes. It was integral to the project that I be a practical as well as academic master of my material. My approach of carnal sociology blurred the line between dancer and academic, as my body became both a tool of social analysis and the object under investigation. If I was to embody the very practices I was studying, I had to discipline my body, train, and master the dance from the inside out. This multilayered approach afforded me a level of authority on both intellectual and practical grounds. As an experienced participant in this world, I can now speak with the authority of a sociologist and as a skilled practitioner and teacher of the craft. By becoming an instructor, I raised my level of awareness, my insight into the dance, and my passion and concern for what I was doing. I do not believe one could produce such a detailed study without going through this immersion and conversion. It would be impossible to do an ethnography of the Lindy Hop world without learning to dance and mastering the craft through the body—without understanding this world through bodily experience.
As a student, teacher, dancer, performer, DJ, and promoter, I became involved in every aspect of the Lindy Hop scene. I took classes, went to dances, and attended workshops and out-of-town dance camps. I met hundreds of people, made many friends, and shared many fascinating conversations and wonderful dances. In this sense my immersion was an easy process, because as a student of the dance there was never any question of what I was doing in these places. I traveled from Chicago to a dozen other major cities in the United States and to the global Lindy Hop camp at Herräng in Sweden, where I was able to see the dance embedded in various local contexts. All of these experiences, and the vast knowledge of social dancing gained therein, provided me with the dance skills necessary to later on gain acceptance in the world of Steppin.’ Doing an embodied ethnographic study forced a new level of reflexive analysis because the focus for everything I was analyzing started with my own involvement. I was implicated by my very immersion in these scenes as to what I was studying and how I was to make sense of it.
I have gathered and compiled the life stories of dancers, teachers, friends, and colleagues using a number of methods: private conversations, interviews, and informal discussions, as well as watching videos of social dancing, participating in workshops, teaching, and performing, following the newspapers’ and popular presses’ coverage of the Swing revival, and exploring the websites of Lindy Hop organizations and scholarly material on jazz and jazz dancing. In the summer of 2000 I lived and trained with two of the top Lindy Hoppers and former world champions for two weeks in Stockholm, Sweden, taking lessons, practicing, watching their Lindy Hop performance troupe rehearsals, and attending their performances. I have conducted in-depth formal interviews with more than fifty instructors, as well as more than one hundred informal interviews with dancers and performers. My extensive fieldnotes, dictation tapes, videotapes, and knowledge of the dance and the dancing social scene have allowed me to comprehensively chronicle the Lindy Hop as well as Steppin’ scenes.
Although much of this study took place in Chicago, I also drew on my travels to Cleveland, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Madison, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Palm Springs, Stockholm, Herrang, Toronto, Montreal, and Boston.¹ Chicago is both a typical and an exceptional example of the Swing revival. Since 1997 the city has been a major hub for Lindy Hop; almost immediately the Lindy Hop became widely popular there, and the number and quality of dancers increased rapidly, providing fertile ground for an ethnography. Despite its geographical specificity, Chicago and the Chicago dancers are intimately tied to the larger Lindy Hop scene; most dancers and teachers migrate to camps and workshops and know each other on a first-name basis. As a result of the globalization of culture, there is no specific Chicago style that distinctly separates it from the white dance scenes in other cities. In addition, through the Internet, the Lindy Exchanges (where dancers from all over meet in one city for a weekend of social dancing), and people traveling on their own to social dance in other cities, the Lindy Hop scene is small enough that most dancers know each other. The scene may be dispersed, but it retains a tight coherence. Because the scenes are so interconnected and everyone takes classes from the same elite core group of teachers, the logic and the production of the dance are tightly maintained.
To undertake such a project, I had to confront the unspoken anxieties, uncertainties, and confusions we encounter in the ways that race matters in everyday life. In addition, I had to wrestle out the interconnection between race and culture and the problematic way that each serves as a proxy for the other in our popular consciousness. At the same time, this is a study about the role of popular culture in American society and how the aesthetics of popular culture are always already informed by racial mediations. While academic in its analysis, the other side of this project contends with the people who engage in popular culture, who turn cultural forms into popular productions. These productions are grounded in socio-racial-historical contexts both past and present, of which practitioners are rarely aware. My interest lies in understanding how the concept of the racial imagination works in the most seemingly innocuous of all places, popular culture, with the least of innocuous consequences: those of symbolic and material domination, which perpetuate inequality, misunderstanding, and racial segregation without any necessary intention. Finally this is a book about racial mythologies or, better yet, demythologizing racial myths of race and culture in an attempt to find a way around our current impasses of racial interactions. If we are to address the anxiety-riddled, politically correct stigma of thinking, talking, debating, and understanding issues of race and how race functions in American society, it may not come from the lofty realms of public policy debates, reforms, and legislation, but from someplace much more common, much more pedestrian, much closer to home, and unavoidable—the culture of everyday life.
While this is a story of dramatic conflict between conventional wisdom running up against sociological critique, it is ultimately about my own struggle to understand my own relationship, as part and parcel of me, to these worlds. In doing so, I confront the Ellisonian cost of insight; a price that once paid forever troubles our commonsense understandings of the world and leaves us without a guarantee of ever seeing things the way we want to see them again.
INTRODUCTION: THE LINDY HOP REVIVAL
That night at Club Liquid was not unlike other Swing nights in Chicago or in other cities around the country or even around the globe; from Nova Scotia to Japan, Swing dancing had reemerged from its apparent cultural dormancy. Here in the United States, from San Diego to New Haven, the whole nation appeared to be caught up in a Swing dance craze (Swing dancing
is the broader colloquial category used to define all forms of dance in this genre, whereas the Lindy Hop
refers to the specific type of