Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Cabaret
View through CrossRef
Where did cabaret come from? What has it got to do with pre-war Berlin, decadent society and Nazis? How does it turn into media cabaret and the sisterhood of sleaze? Is cabaret a primary vehicle for exploring the range of sexual practices and alternative sexual identities?
In this new book William Grange brings into one place for the first time the range of practices now associated with the form of cabaret. Beginning with its origins in speciality German theatres and the development both of the sheet music industry and disc recordings, Grange tracks the form through into its golden age in the 1920s and beyond.
The book’s three sections deal first with the emergence of Berlin as the ‘German Chicago’, where cabaret flourished in the midst of post-war political turmoil. The abolition of censorship allowed nude dancing and sexually explicit songs and routines. It also saw the introduction of kick-line dancing and black performers. In the book’s second and third sections Grange takes the story forward into the post second-world-war world, describing how the form moved outwards from central Europe to move across the whole world, reaching Singapore and Australia, and as it did so settling into the range of forms in which we know it today. Some of these forms became ‘media cabaret’ looking towards the new media age, the postmodernism that followed on from modernism. To this age, even in its new forms, cabaret brought its old habits of making challenges to assumptions around gender identities and sexual practices. As throughout its whole history, cabaret was a form that provided particular vehicles for female performers. And whereas it once served up whore songs and nude dancing it now offers a sisterhood of sleaze.
Title: Cabaret
Description:
Where did cabaret come from? What has it got to do with pre-war Berlin, decadent society and Nazis? How does it turn into media cabaret and the sisterhood of sleaze? Is cabaret a primary vehicle for exploring the range of sexual practices and alternative sexual identities?
In this new book William Grange brings into one place for the first time the range of practices now associated with the form of cabaret.
Beginning with its origins in speciality German theatres and the development both of the sheet music industry and disc recordings, Grange tracks the form through into its golden age in the 1920s and beyond.
The book’s three sections deal first with the emergence of Berlin as the ‘German Chicago’, where cabaret flourished in the midst of post-war political turmoil.
The abolition of censorship allowed nude dancing and sexually explicit songs and routines.
It also saw the introduction of kick-line dancing and black performers.
In the book’s second and third sections Grange takes the story forward into the post second-world-war world, describing how the form moved outwards from central Europe to move across the whole world, reaching Singapore and Australia, and as it did so settling into the range of forms in which we know it today.
Some of these forms became ‘media cabaret’ looking towards the new media age, the postmodernism that followed on from modernism.
To this age, even in its new forms, cabaret brought its old habits of making challenges to assumptions around gender identities and sexual practices.
As throughout its whole history, cabaret was a form that provided particular vehicles for female performers.
And whereas it once served up whore songs and nude dancing it now offers a sisterhood of sleaze.
Related Results
(Prognosis) Happy Bodies, Happy Hours: “Au Cabaret-vert, cinq heures du soir”
(Prognosis) Happy Bodies, Happy Hours: “Au Cabaret-vert, cinq heures du soir”
The question raised at the end of Chapter 2—“what would a world without the poor being left out in the cold look like?”—finds a response in the poem “Au Cabaret-vert, cinq heures d...
Hugo Ball Almanach
Hugo Ball Almanach
Unbekannte Texte von Hugo Ball sowie Reden von und zu den Hugo-Ball-Preisträgern Bov Bjerg und Kinga Tóth.
Nur noch höchst selten werden bisher nicht bekannte Texte von H...
Maurice Rollinat
Maurice Rollinat
Poet, musician, and Chat noir cabaret artist Maurice Rollinat set Baudelaire to music a number of times during the 1880s. This chapter analyses two key sets of songs published in 1...
Hugo Ball Almanach
Hugo Ball Almanach
Unbekannte Texte aus dem Jahr 1913 von Emmy Hennings, von Walter Serner und Carl Einstein stehen im Mittelpunkt des neuen Almanachs.
Der immer stärker beachteten Dichteri...
Nice Girls Gone Blue
Nice Girls Gone Blue
This chapter foregrounds a performance ethnography among New York’s Jewish neoburlesque and cabaret spoofs on the Hanukkah circuit from 2011 to 2016. By looking at what the body do...
Alec Wilder in Spite of Himself
Alec Wilder in Spite of Himself
Abstract
Alec Wilder wrote songs and lyrics of unsurpassed beauty and originality, and his work won the respect and admiration of such important musical figures a...
Theatre of Kander and Ebb
Theatre of Kander and Ebb
Discover John Kander and Fred Ebb, the most artistically and commercially successful musical theatre writing team since Rodgers and Hammerstein, in a brand new way. Identifying th...

