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Flamboyant zoot suit culture, with its ties to fashion, jazz and swing music, jitterbug and Lindy Hop dancing, unique patterns of speech, and even risqué experimentation with gender and sexuality, captivated the country's youth in the 1940s. The Power of the Zoot is the first book to give national consideration to this famous phenomenon. Providing a new history of youth culture based on rare, in-depth interviews with former zoot-suiters, Luis Alvarez explores race, region, and the politics of culture in urban America during World War II. He argues that Mexican American and African American youths, along with many nisei and white youths, used popular culture to oppose accepted modes of youthful behavior, the dominance of white middle-class norms, and expectations from within their own communities.
Luis Alvarez is Associate Professor of History at the University of California, San Diego.
List of Illustrations
Introduction 1
Pt. 1 Dignity Denied: Youth in the Early War Years
1 Race and Political Economy 15
2 Class Politics and Juvenile Delinquency 42
Pt. 2 The Struggle for Dignity: Zoot Style during World War II
3 Zoot Style and Body Politics 77
4 Zoots, Jazz, and Public Space 113
Pt. 3 Violence and National Belonging on the Home Front
5 Zoot Violence in Los Angeles 155
6 Race Riots across the United States 200
Epilogue: From Zoot Suits to Hip-Hop 235
Notes 245
Bibliography 289
Index 305
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