“Swinging” Cultural Difference in Eastern Europe: The Genesis and Structure of the Hungarian Jazz Diaspora

14 November 2023, 4.30 PM - 14 November 2023, 6.00 PM

Ádám Havas, Department of Sociology, University of Barcelona

Victoria's Room, Department of Music, The Victoria Rooms

Based on material from Dr Havas’ monograph, The Genesis and Structure of the Hungarian Jazz Diaspora, (Routledge, 2022) the talk explores one hundred years of jazz in Hungary from three major aspects:

  1. the subversive role of jazz in the redefinition of racialized concepts of “national culture”,
  2. Hungary’s geocultural “swinging” between “East” and “West” and
  3. the emergence of a folk music inspired national free jazz movement.

Conflicting definitions of jazz—“the sound of Western modernity”—have resulted in a symbolic rivalry in Hungary between US-centric mainstream jazz on the one hand and a free jazz aesthetics following the folklore-to-contemporary music tradition of Béla Bartók. Notions such as “traditionalism” and “modernism” have been linked to class- and “race”- based cultural distinctions, and they offer critical insights into the social logic of Hungary’s geocultural positioning in the “twilight zone” between “East” and “West”. A shift from “coffeehouse music” to bebop became a significant marker in the artistic strategies of Romani musicians, so much so that jazz continues to function as means to express cultural difference. Drawing on Bourdieu’s cultural sociology, popular music studies and postcolonial scholarship, the talk highlights the manifold, two-directional connections of this jazz scene to global networks of cultural production.

Biography:

Ádám Havas is a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellow at the University of Barcelona, Department of Sociology. He is a member of the editorial board at Jazz Research Journal and managing editor of the leading Hungarian social science journal Replika. He is co-edior, with Bruce Johnson and David Horn of the Routledge Companion to Diasporic Jazz Studies. His book, The Genesis and Structure of the Hungarian Jazz Diaspora (Routledge) was published in 2022.

Black and white image of a man with short hair, wearing dark framed glasses, with close shaven beard.  Wearing blazer and striped shirt in midst of talk and gesturing with hands.

Ádám Havas

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