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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ronald D. Cohen (Professor Emeritus of History, Professor Emeritus of History, Indiana University - Northwest, Gary, Indiana) , James Capaldi (Emeritus, Emeritus, Delaware County Community College, Springfield, PA)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.499kg ISBN: 9780199862016ISBN 10: 019986201 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 23 January 2014 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents"Introduction A. Background 1. Gene Marine, ""Guerrilla Minstrel"" (1972) 2. ""Pete Seeger: 2002"" (2005) B. The Early Years 3. Lawrence Emery, ""Interesting Summer"" (1939); Pete Seeger, ""Pete And His Banjo Meet Some Fine Mountain Folks,"" (1940) 4. Pete Seeger, ""Banjo Picker in Kentucky"" and ""Back Where I Come From"" (1941) 5. George Lewis, ""America is in Their Songs: Pete Bowers and Al [sic] Hays collect U.S. Folk Ballads"" (1941) 6. The Almanac Singers [Pete Seeger] to Son House (1942); E.A., ""The 'Almanacs' Part, But Keep on Singing"" (1943) 7. Pete Seeger, ""Report From The Marianas"" (1945) 8. Woody Guthrie, ""People's Songs and Its People"" (1990) 9. Pete Seeger, ""People's Songs Workshop"" (1946); Pete Seeger, ""People's Songs and Singers"" (1946); ""Report to members"" (1946); Pete Seeger, ""Report to members"" (1946) 10. Pete Seeger, Letter to People's Songs supporters (1948); Pete Seeger, Letter to People's Songs supporters (1948); Pete Seeger, Minutes of the ""Meeting of National Board of Directors of People's Songs"" (1948) C. The 1950s 11. Robert W. Dana, ""Village Vanguard Has Real Hoe-Down"" (1950); Jay Russell, ""How the Weavers Break Night Club Ice"" (1950); ""Out of the Corner"" (1950); ""Weavers' Yarn"" (1951); Frederick Woltman, ""Melody Weaves On, Along Party Line,"" (1951) 12. Alan Lomax notes Darling Corey (1950); Pete Seeger to Ray M. Lawless (1953) 13. Irwin Silber, ""Pete Seeger"" (1954) 14. Monty Mons, ""Pete Seeger: An Appreciation"" (1955); Summary of government charges, 1955-1957 (1957) 15. Pete Seeger, ""A letter of greetings to the editors and readers of Sing Along"" (1957) 16. ""Blind Raferty"" (aka Dave Van Ronk) (1957); Emerson L. Batdorff, ""It's Not Nose in Folk Song, Artist Proves,"" (1958) 17. Ronald Radosh, Commies (2001) D. The 1960s 18. Moses Asch, ""Foreword"" (1961) 19. ""Statement In Court By Pete Seeger Before Judge Thomas F. Murphy, Federal Court, New York"" (1961); David Marcus, ""Seeger Cites Battle Of Politics, Arts,"" (1961) 20. Eric Winter, ""Pete Seeger sails in to a hero's welcome"" (1961); Pete Seeger, ""When you're singing just be yourself"" (1961) 21. Alan Hjerpe, ""Pete Seeger In L.A. Concert"" (1962) 22. Pete Seeger, ""The Country Washboard Band"" (1963); Pete Seeger, ""Introduction: Woody Guthrie Folk Songs"" (1963); Pete Seeger, ""Introduction: The Bells of Rhymney"" (1964) 23. Pete Seeger letter to Sis Cunningham and Gordon Friesen (1963); Pete Seeger, ""What's In A Word?"" (1964); ""Pete Seeger Arrives In Prague To Begin Concert Tour In Eastern Europe"" (1964); Ruth Daniloff, ""Pete Seeger In Moscow"" (1964) 24. Jon Pankake, ""Pete's Children: The American Folksong Revival, Pro and Con"" (1964) 25. [Pete Seeger], ""Pete Seeger"" (1965); Ralph J. Gleason, ""A Folk Singer Who Meets You Half-Way,"" (1965) 26. Paul Cowan, ""Non-Confrontation In Beacon, New York,"" (1965) 27. ""Big and Muddy"" (1967) 28. Pete Seeger, ""To Save a River,"" Guideposts (1970) E. The 1970s and After 29. Tom Smucker, ""If Every Concert Were A Benefit, Pete Seeger Would Be Frank Sinatra"" (1976); Joe Klein, ""Pete Seeger's steelyard benefit,"" (1977) 30. Marc Fisher, ""America's Best-Loved Commie"" (1994) 31. Scott Alarik, ""No more awards! Pete Seeger"" (1996) 32. Greg Kot, ""The Boss pulls off celebrating Seeger"" (2006) 33. Dick Flacks, ""Pete Seeger's Project,"" (2009) AFTERWORD Bibliography"Reviews""The Pete Seeger Reader takes us through a wealth of writings both by and about its subject. Some have been previously published in sources well-known and obscure; others are writings - letters, unpublished essays...The selection covers the sweep of Seeger's public life, from 1939 (when the twenty-year-old is first mentioned in a Daily Worker article) to 2009, when Seeger joined Bruce Springsteen on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to sing the complete version of Guthrie's ""This Land Is Your Land"" for the first Obama inauguration."" --Will Kaufman, University of Central Lancashire ""Just as there can never be too many songs from Pete Seeger, there can never be too many books about him - and there are offerings in this volume that I have never found elsewhere, new insights into this extraordinary man, my beloved brother."" --Peggy Seeger ""This book has the important pieces about (and by) Pete Seeger. It follows him from a gangly youngster learning banjo licks on an old-timer's porch to his international fame inspiring social movements via music, from civil and human rights to our all-too-slow environmental awakening. Today's songwriters, turning to music to express their spirit and social awareness, all owe him a debt; we all do."" --David Dunaway, co-author of Sing Out!: An Oral History of America's Folk Music Revivals Although a wide range of prose styles is represented, encompassing terse depositions from seasoned Red-hunters and the self-consciously folksy styles of Woody Guthrie and Seeger himself, the prevailing tone is one of unmitigated admiration. Lou Glandfield, The Times Literary Supplement Just as there can never be too many songs from Pete Seeger, there can never be too many books about him - and there are offerings in this volume that I have never found elsewhere, new insights into this extraordinary man, my beloved brother. Peggy Seeger This book has the important pieces about (and by) Pete Seeger. It follows him from a gangly youngster learning banjo licks on an old-timer's porch to his international fame inspiring social movements via music, from civil and human rights to our all-too-slow environmental awakening. Today's songwriters, turning to music to express their spirit and social awareness, all owe him a debt; we all do. David Dunaway, co-author of Sing Out!: An Oral History of Americas Folk Music Revivals. Just as there can never be too many songs from Pete Seeger, there can never be too many books about him - and there are offerings in this volume that I have never found elsewhere, new insights into this extraordinary man, my beloved brother. --Peggy Seeger This book has the important pieces about (and by) Pete Seeger. It follows him from a gangly youngster learning banjo licks on an old-timer's porch to his international fame inspiring social movements via music, from civil and human rights to our all-too-slow environmental awakening. Today's songwriters, turning to music to express their spirit and social awareness, all owe him a debt; we all do. --David Dunaway, co-author of Sing Out!: An Oral History of America's Folk Music Revivals Author InformationRonald Cohen is Professor Emeritus of History Indiana University Northwest, and author of A History of Folk Music Festivals in the United States: Feasts of Musical Celebration (Scarecrow, 2008), Folk Music: The Basics (Routledge, 2006) and Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940-1970 (Massachusetts, 2002). Jim Capaldi is a folk music enthusiast who maintains an impressive Pete Seeger site at http://www.peteseeger.net/. He has published numerous articles on folk music. 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