"An artful intersection of literary and performance studies, The Scene of Harlem Cabaret combines rich readings of the so-called Cabaret School of Harlem Renaissance writers with an innovative study of the cabaret itself. . . . Vogel 'reads' the cabaret both as an object of literary imagination and as a social text, a method that affords him new approaches to the evanescent evidences of the queer, black, and underground."
--Tavia Nyong'o "American Quarterly" "Both queer and literary theorists will find much to admire in this study. . . . Vogel has constructed his thesis on solid evidence and scholarly research. Those general readers who are slowed down by some of the theoretical terminology are encouraged to persevere, for the book provides valuable, candid insights into an important era of American cultural history." --Eugene Hayworth "Quill" "Vogel provides an overview of cabaret in the U.S. and its relation to other stage modes; looks at representations of the Harlem cabaret scene (visual, literary, musical); and offers a compelling discussion of 'closing time' as a liminal, queer space that appealed to artists."-- "Choice""Vogel's best passages are brimming with arresting ideas and brilliant observations. He has mined some very recondite archives to illuminate the conditions of the cabaret's alterity and resistance. Few scholars have trawled through the voluminous but elusive material of the cabaret, largely because few scholars have Vogel's knack for making poignant sense of what occurs in late-night enclaves. This is groundbreaking work, telling a rarely told tale both compassionately and powerfully."
-- "Modernism/modernity""At the turn of the last century, W. E. B. Du Bois took up what he called 'the problem of amusement' with prescience as well as reticence. That problem is now taken up again by Shane Vogel with the kind of rigorous critical imagination that would disturb and, finally, gratify Du Bois, forcing him literally and figuratively to attend (to) scenes he might otherwise strenuously have avoided. Vogel illuminates and amplifies in too many ways to count the singular cultural politics of the scene of Harlem cabaret. Happily, he gives us occasion once again to consider how the terrible ruses and potential reconstruction of democracy in America are marked, on the one hand, and initialized, on the other, in our ludic underground."
--Fred Moten, Duke University"Evocative, elegant, and engrossing are words that characterize this lively study that resurrects the lush, smoke-filled atmosphere of Harlem cabarets. Reading the contested space of the cabaret as material to compose and perform alternative narratives of race and sex, this study makes visceral the queer intimacies of cabaret's everynight life and analyzes the lives of performers from Lena Horne, Bricktop, and Ethel Waters, poetic works by Claude McKay and Langston Hughes, and embodied movements of audiences. Scholars in performance studies, history, literary modernism, and queer theory have much to learn from this excellent book."
--Jennifer DeVere Brody, Duke University"In The Scene of Harlem Cabaret , Shane Vogel combines performance studies and literary studies with deftness, acuity, and prescience, looking boldly to the future of the field. His illuminating thesis about the generative experiences produced by these jook-joint, honky-tonk, sin-cellar, concert-saloon night spots--small enough for 'public intimacy, ' large enough for social 'breathing space' and 'wiggle room'--reimagines the works of the 'Cabaret School' in a new light, proving not that life is a cabaret, but that cabaret was a life for some the greatest American artists of the twentieth century--vital, risky, and transformative."
--Joseph Roach, Yale University
Evocative, elegant, and engrossing are words that characterize this lively study that resurrects the lush, smoke-filled atmosphere of Harlem cabarets. Reading the contested space of the cabaret as material to compose and perform alternative narratives of race and sex, this study makes visceral the queer intimacies of cabaret’s everynight life and analyzes the lives of performers from Lena Horne, Bricktop, and Ethel Waters, poetic works by Claude McKay and Langston Hughes, and embodied movements of audiences. Scholars in performance studies, history, literary modernism, and queer theory have much to learn from this excellent book.”
In The Scene of Harlem Cabaret , Shane Vogel combines performance studies and literary studies with deftness, acuity, and prescience, looking boldly to the future of the field. His illuminating thesis about the generative experiences produced by these jook-joint, honky-tonk, sin-cellar, concert-saloon night spots—small enough for ‘public intimacy,’ large enough for social ‘breathing space’ and ‘wiggle room’—reimagines the works of the ‘Cabaret School’ in a new light, proving not that life is a cabaret, but that cabaret was a life for some the greatest American artists of the twentieth century—vital, risky, and transformative.”
Vogel’s best passages are brimming with arresting ideas and brilliant observations. He has mined some very recondite archives to illuminate the conditions of the cabaret’s alterity and resistance. Few scholars have trawled through the voluminous but elusive material of the cabaret, largely because few scholars have Vogel’s knack for making poignant sense of what occurs in late-night enclaves. This is groundbreaking work, telling a rarely told tale both compassionately and powerfully.”
"An artful intersection of literary and performance studies, The Scene of Harlem Cabaret combines rich readings of the so-called Cabaret School of Harlem Renaissance writers with an innovative study of the cabaret itself. . . . Vogel 'reads' the cabaret both as an object of literary imagination and as a social text, a method that affords him new approaches to the evanescent evidences of the queer, black, and underground."
At the turn of the last century, W. E. B. Du Bois took up what he called ‘the problem of amusement’ with prescience as well as reticence. That problem is now taken up again by Shane Vogel with the kind of rigorous critical imagination that would disturb and, finally, gratify Du Bois, forcing him literally and figuratively to attend (to) scenes he might otherwise strenuously have avoided. Vogel illuminates and amplifies in too many ways to count the singular cultural politics of the scene of Harlem cabaret. Happily, he gives us occasion once again to consider how the terrible ruses and potential reconstruction of democracy in America are marked, on the one hand, and initialized, on the other, in our ludic underground.”
"Vogel provides an overview of cabaret in the U.S. and its relation to other stage modes; looks at representations of the Harlem cabaret scene (visual, literary, musical); and offers a compelling discussion of 'closing time' as a liminal, queer space that appealed to artists."
"Both queer and literary theorists will find much to admire in this study. . . . Vogel has constructed his thesis on solid evidence and scholarly research. Those general readers who are slowed down by some of the theoretical terminology are encouraged to persevere, for the book provides valuable, candid insights into an important era of American cultural history."
"An artful intersection of literary and performance studies, The Scene of Harlem Cabaret combines rich readings of the so-called Cabaret School of Harlem Renaissance writers with an innovative study of the cabaret itself. . . . Vogel 'reads' the cabaret both as an object of literary imagination and as a social text, a method that affords him new approaches to the evanescent evidences of the queer, black, and underground."
American Quarterly - Tavia Nyong'o
An artful intersection of literary and performance studies, The Scene of Harlem Cabaret combines rich readings of the so-called Cabaret School of Harlem Renaissance writers with an innovative study of the cabaret itself. . . . Vogel 'reads' the cabaret both as an object of literary imagination and as a social text, a method that affords him new approaches to the evanescent evidences of the queer, black, and underground.
Tavia Nyong'o
Vogel’s best passages are brimming with arresting ideas and brilliant observations. He has mined some very recondite archives to illuminate the conditions of the cabaret’s alterity and resistance. Few scholars have trawled through the voluminous but elusive material of the cabaret, largely because few scholars have Vogel’s knack for making poignant sense of what occurs in late-night enclaves. This is groundbreaking work, telling a rarely told tale both compassionately and powerfully.
Both queer and literary theorists will find much to admire in this study. . . . Vogel has constructed his thesis on solid evidence and scholarly research. Those general readers who are slowed down by some of the theoretical terminology are encouraged to persevere, for the book provides valuable, candid insights into an important era of American cultural history.
Eugene Hayworth