Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York: From the Suppressed to the Strange

Author:   Jonathan Ezra Goldman (New York Institute of Technology)
Publisher:   State University of New York Press
ISBN:  

9798855806212


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   01 May 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York: From the Suppressed to the Strange


Overview

Offers a panoramic view of New York City in the 1920s, uncovering hidden histories from within entertainment, politics, arts, technology, and the law. Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York offers a fresh look at 1920s New York City, unearthing stories of everyday life and marginalized communities. In sections that intertwine entertainment, politics, art, technology, crime, shopping, eating, and recreation, the book portrays sweeping events such as the Harlem Renaissance, Prohibition, and immigration reform through anecdotes of individual experiences that counter the era's popular conceptions of ballooning wealth and uproarious celebration. Jonathan Ezra Goldman's whirlwind tour of early 1920s New York City visits an all-female police platoon, a Black amusement park shut down before it opened, an Arabic literary salon, socialist Puerto Rican cigar factories, Chinatown funerals, lesbian cafes, overcrowded jails, toxic dumps, and Ku Klux Klan recruitment offices. The grand narratives of the 1920s interweave with little-known anecdotes about well-known figures such as Marcus Garvey, Dorothy Parker, and Babe Ruth, serving as a backdrop to the everyday challenges and triumphs of a city beset by crowds, automobile traffic, and rapidly changing technology and urban infrastructure, as well as erased stories of injustices like Jim Crow practices, immigration anxieties, and the violent treatment of political dissent. These stories still resonate today, showing that this dizzying, exuberant ride through hidden history can help twenty-first readers see our own moment more clearly.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jonathan Ezra Goldman (New York Institute of Technology)
Publisher:   State University of New York Press
Imprint:   State University of New York Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.476kg
ISBN:  

9798855806212


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   01 May 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

""Jonathan Goldman's Hidden Histories is a wonder and a delight—a lyrical and surprising historical excavation of Jazz Age New York that had me riveted from page one. You will find plenty of familiar figures (Dorothy Parker, Babe Ruth) between these covers, but even more exciting are the unfamiliar ones. This book deserves a prominent place on any shelf of enduring works of New York City history."" — Jonathan Mahler, author of The Gods of New York ""Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York is that rare work of history that is both eminently scholarly—a nearly encyclopedic look at 1920s New York—and enchantingly readable. Goldman brings to vivid life figures, moments, and movements that have for too long been ignored. The book looks backward to look forward; that is, it helps us to understand how we got to where we are now. In particular, Jonathan Goldman explores the lives of figures who have, because of their race, gender, sexuality, or immigration status, been sidelined in our history books as much (or more) than they were in their own time. A fantastic work of engaged scholarship."" — Hugh Ryan, author of When Brooklyn Was Queer ""Jonathan Goldman has composed a compelling narrative chronicling a transformative decade in New York City's history—one whose themes still resonate a century later. You’ll read about the eccentric health obsessions of millionaire businessmen, the audacity of women performers challenging social taboos, the rise of nativist movements, and the fervent debates surrounding women's rights and immigration reform, technological innovations that revolutionized music consumption and the emergence of the cult of personality. What's old is most definitely new again! Goldman's vignettes juxtapose the glittering lives of celebrities with poignant accounts of lost loves and failed enterprises among ordinary citizens—individuals whose contributions helped shape the City's singular and resplendent cultural identity. Like New York City itself, these stories form an intricate tapestry, illuminating the forces that render it endlessly dynamic and culturally rich."" — Elena Martinez, Folklorist, City Lore/Bronx Music Heritage Center ""In Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York, Jonathan Ezra Goldman takes readers on a wild ride through New York City during the 1920s Jazz Age. Goldman challenges the reliance upon a familiar, singular narrative of this period (or any period, for that matter). Viewing daily life through multiple lenses across lines of class, gender, sexuality, race, and ethnicity provides readers with the opportunity to understand better the range of human experiences and the complexity of urban politics and society."" — Shirley J. Yee, author of An Immigrant Neighborhood: Interethnic and Interracial Encounters in New York before 1930


""Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York is that rare work of history that is both eminently scholarly—a nearly encyclopedic look at 1920s New York—and enchantingly readable. Goldman brings to vivid life figures, moments, and movements that have for too long been ignored. The book looks backward to look forward; that is, it helps us to understand how we got to where we are now. In particular, Jonathan Goldman explores the lives of figures who have, because of their race, gender, sexuality, or immigration status, been sidelined in our history books as much (or more) than they were in their own time. A fantastic work of engaged scholarship."" — Hugh Ryan, author of When Brooklyn Was Queer ""In Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York, Jonathan Ezra Goldman takes readers on a wild ride through New York City during the 1920s Jazz Age. Goldman challenges the reliance upon a familiar, singular narrative of this period (or any period, for that matter). Viewing daily life through multiple lenses across lines of class, gender, sexuality, race, and ethnicity provides readers with the opportunity to understand better the range of human experiences and the complexity of urban politics and society."" — Shirley J. Yee, author of An Immigrant Neighborhood: Interethnic and Interracial Encounters in New York before 1930


""Jonathan Goldman's Hidden Histories is a wonder and a delight—a lyrical and surprising historical excavation of Jazz Age New York that had me riveted from page one. You will find plenty of familiar figures (Dorothy Parker, Babe Ruth) between these covers, but even more exciting are the unfamiliar ones. This book deserves a prominent place on any shelf of enduring works of New York City history."" — Jonathan Mahler, author of The Gods of New York ""Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York is that rare work of history that is both eminently scholarly—a nearly encyclopedic look at 1920s New York—and enchantingly readable. Goldman brings to vivid life figures, moments, and movements that have for too long been ignored. The book looks backward to look forward; that is, it helps us to understand how we got to where we are now. In particular, Jonathan Goldman explores the lives of figures who have, because of their race, gender, sexuality, or immigration status, been sidelined in our history books as much (or more) than they were in their own time. A fantastic work of engaged scholarship."" — Hugh Ryan, author of When Brooklyn Was Queer ""In Hidden Histories of Jazz Age New York, Jonathan Ezra Goldman takes readers on a wild ride through New York City during the 1920s Jazz Age. Goldman challenges the reliance upon a familiar, singular narrative of this period (or any period, for that matter). Viewing daily life through multiple lenses across lines of class, gender, sexuality, race, and ethnicity provides readers with the opportunity to understand better the range of human experiences and the complexity of urban politics and society."" — Shirley J. Yee, author of An Immigrant Neighborhood: Interethnic and Interracial Encounters in New York before 1930


Author Information

Jonathan Ezra Goldman is Professor in the Humanities Department at New York Institute of Technology. His previous books include Modernism Is the Literature of Celebrity and Joyce and the Law. He lives in New York City.

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