The Rebel Café: Sex, Race, and Politics in Cold War America’s Nightclub Underground

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JHU Press, Nov 1, 2018 - History - 336 pages

The art and antics of rebellious figures in 1950s American nightlife—from the Beat Generation to eccentric jazz musicians and comedians—have long fascinated fans and scholars alike. In The Rebel Café, Stephen R. Duncan flips the frame, focusing on the New York and San Francisco bars, nightclubs, and coffeehouses from which these cultural icons emerged. Duncan shows that the sexy, smoky sites of bohemian Greenwich Village and North Beach offered not just entertainment but doorways to a new sociopolitical consciousness.

This book is a collective biography of the places that harbored beatniks, blabbermouths, hipsters, playboys, and partisans who altered the shape of postwar liberal politics and culture. Throughout this period, Duncan argues, nightspots were crucial—albeit informal—institutions of the American democratic public sphere. Amid the Red Scare’s repressive politics, the urban underground of New York and San Francisco acted as both a fallout shelter for left-wingers and a laboratory for social experimentation.

Touching on literary figures from Norman Mailer and Amiri Baraka to Susan Sontag as well as performers ranging from Dave Brubeck to Maya Angelou to Lenny Bruce, The Rebel Café profiles hot spots such as the Village Vanguard, the hungry i, the Black Cat Cafe, and the White Horse Tavern. Ultimately, the book provides a deeper view of 1950s America, not simply as the black-and-white precursor to the Technicolor flamboyance of the sixties but as a rich period of artistic expression and identity formation that blended cultural production and politics.

 

Contents

Introduction Can You Show Me the Way to the Rebel Café?
1
Cabaret and the LeftWing Roots of the Rebel Café
13
Postwar Americas Literary Underground
50
Jazz Civil Rights and the Politics of CrossRacial Desire
78
New Bohemia and the Search for Community
113
Nightclubs Humor and the Public Sphere
154
Performance Personal Politics and the End of the Rebel Café
193
American Culture the New Left and the Legacy of the Rebel Café
227
Notes
239
Index
305
Copyright

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About the author (2018)

Stephen R. Duncan is an assistant professor of history at Bronx Community College of the City University of New York.

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