Colter Harper is an ethnomusicologist and musician whose creative and scholarly work explores jazz, American nightlife, and the music of West Africa. Harper served as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Ghana from 2018 to 2020 and has performed as a guitarist, including with the rock band Rusted Root. He is currently a teaching assistant professor in the Department of Music at the University at Buffalo.
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Description
Preface Introduction: Jazz, Nightlife, and the Hill District Part I: Dangerous Ground: Black and Tan Clubs, Vice, and Prohibition (1920-1934) Chapter 1: Racial and Sexual Politics of Black and Tan Nightlife Chapter 2: Claiming a Place for Jazz: The Collins and Paramount Inns Part II: Pittsburgh's Renaissance and Jazz's Golden Age (1945-1968) Chapter 3: Competing Visions of Modernity Chapter 4: Life in the Jazz House: The Crawford Grill No. 2 and Hurricane Bar Part III: The Paradox of Progress: Jazz as Black Musical Labor (1908-1977) Chapter 5: Civil Rights and the Musicians Union Chapter 6: Challenging Discrimination, Resisting Merger Part IV: Jazz and the Community Archive (1968-1977) Chapter 7: Hill Nightlife in the Wake of 1968 Chapter 8: The Community Archive in Practice Epilogue: To Honor and Repair Acknowledgments Appendix Notes Index

