Juanita Karpf played cello professionally, taught music in grades K–12, and held positions at the University of Georgia, Oberlin College, and Case Western Reserve University. Her research has appeared in such publications as American Music, Black Music Research Journal, and Popular Music and Society.
In Performing Racial Uplift, Juanita Karpf makes an important
contribution to our awareness and understanding of a phenomenal
musician, activist, and educator, as well as the era in which she
lived. Although Madame Emma Azalia Smith Hackley (1867-1922) has
largely faded from memory and public record, Karpf's decades of
research create a surprisingly comprehensive account and one which
provides rich historical contextualization.--Benjamen W. Douglas,
University of Arizona "American Nineteenth Century History"
For too long the contributions of concert artist, educator, and
impresario Azalia Hackley have been pushed into the margins of
American music historiography. Performing Racial Uplift corrects
this by offering a nuanced reading that not only captures the life
of this transformational figure but situates Hackley into larger
historical narratives that connect her with Black women activists
such as Ida B. Wells, Anna Julia Cooper, and Frances Harper, who
were also central in shaping the ideology of racial uplift in
Gilded Age America.--Tammy L. Kernodle, University Distinguished
Professor of Music at Miami University in Ohio and author of Soul
on Soul: The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams
Juanita Karpf's insightful and probing analysis of Azalia
Hackley--performer, music educator, author, lecturer, and
activist--offers a fascinating and nuanced look at this gifted
concert artist and her unique strategies for uplift activism.
Endowed with charisma and guided by a lifelong commitment to the
tenets of the New Thought Movement, Hackley passionately pursued an
approach to music education for the masses that instilled racial
pride and self-esteem. She modeled expressions of resistance that
found middle ground between the perceived binary stances of the Du
Bois and Washington ideologies. Through engaging dialogue, detailed
scholarship, and rich context, Performing Racial Uplift reawakens
us to Azalia Hackley's significant contribution as a pioneering
musician and important leader of her race.--Toni P. Anderson,
author of Tell Them We Are Singing for Jesus: The Original Fisk
Jubilee Singers and Christian Reconstruction, 1871-1878
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