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Freddy Fender's Blackbrown Country Ecologies
Author(s) -
Deborah R. Vargas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of popular music studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.131
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 1533-1598
pISSN - 1524-2226
DOI - 10.1525/jpms.2020.32.2.77
Subject(s) - fender , white (mutation) , narrative , historiography , musical , aesthetics , art , focus (optics) , history , sociology , gender studies , visual arts , literature , engineering , archaeology , mechanical engineering , biochemistry , chemistry , gene , physics , optics
Country music has often been held together in dominant public narratives by binaries, such as Mexican-white or Black-white in an attempt to maintain a sense of authentic whiteness. A similar historiographical move occurs in Chicano/Mexican American Studies with regard to the binary brown/white. My focus then is to consider how we might listen to the Black musical sounds of country music through the performances of a brown country boy, Freddy Fender.

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