![]() | |
Author | Mark Gauvreau Judge |
---|---|
Subject | Swing music |
Genre | American culture |
Published | 2000 |
Publisher | Spence Publishing Company |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Hardcover |
Pages | 128 |
ISBN | 978-1890626242 |
OCLC | 43728944 |
LC Class | 00-26706 |
Preceded by | Wasted: Tales of a GenX Drunk (1997) |
Followed by | Damn Senators (2003) |
[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] |
If It Ain't Got That Swing: The Rebirth of Grown-Up Culture is a 2000 non-fiction book about swing music and changes in American culture, written by Mark Gauvreau Judge. [1] [2] Judge had previously written a memoir about his alcoholism titled Wasted: Tales of a GenX Drunk . [6] [7] If It Ain't Got That Swing chronicles the author's experimentation with swing dancing lessons, and his reluctance to do so due to his prior usage of alcohol as a way to relax himself in large social situations. [3]
Judge ascribes the 1996 film Swingers and a 1998 Gap Inc. commercial with youths dancing to the Lindy Hop as evidentiary of the swing revival. [3] Judge criticizes the American culture of the 1960s and rock and roll, as forms of adolescence society in the United States. [2] [1] The book documents the author's shift from liberalism to support of right-wing politics. [1] [2]
If It Ain't Got That Swing received negative book reviews from Library Journal , [2] Kirkus Reviews , [1] The Wall Street Journal , [4] and Reason . [3] Library Journal criticized the book's writing style and called it a "sophomoric, opinionated diatribe". [2] Kirkus Reviews called it a "diatribe" and wrote that it failed due to "single-mindedness and humorlessness". [1] The Wall Street Journal called Judge's argumentation "persuasive" but "incomplete", and pointed out inconsistencies in the book. [4] Writing for Reason, Jesse Walker also found factual errors in Judge's work. [3]
If It Ain't Got That Swing chronicles the author's transition from support of liberalism towards right-wing politics. [1] [2] Judge says he was influenced by the writings of Christopher Lasch, especially his work The Culture of Narcissism . [1] [2] The author's shift from left-wing politics to conservatism was additionally motivated by his initial foray into swing dancing. [1] [2] Judge examines the contemporary period of swing revival. [8]
The author recounts what he views as a subculture appreciative of rock and roll within American society which is devoid of any real meaning. [2] Judge argues that this rock and roll culture is representative of an adolescent mentality. [9] He criticizes changes which took place in the United States during the 1960s and praises cotillions as a way to return to an earlier period within American society. [5]
Judge writes that he himself took up swing dancing in the locality of Washington, D.C. in 1995. [3] He describes for the reader the nervousness he felt while entering his first swing dance lesson, because he had previously relied upon alcoholic beverages as a way to make himself feel more comfortable in public gatherings. [3] He charts the swing revival to two factors: the 1996 film Swingers , and a 1998 advertisement with youths performing the Lindy Hop while promoting Gap Inc. clothing. [3]
Judge pines for a culture in the United States reminiscent of more conservative ideology. [2] Judge cites the adultery of Bill Clinton as evidence of a breakdown in social values. [2] He criticizes feminism and instead embraces a culture of chivalry. [2] The author puts forth an argument that liberalism is hypocritical. [2] Judge asserts that culture within the United States lacks organization, freedom, and connectedness. [1] He argues that these qualities can be found in swing revival. [1]
Prior to writing If It Ain't Got That Swing, Judge had worked as a journalist in his early twenties. [10] Before publishing If It Ain't Got That Swing, Judge had written Wasted: Tales of a GenX Drunk (1997). [6] [10] [7] If It Ain't Got That Swing was first published in hardcover format in 2000, by Spence Publishing Company. [11] [12] An eBook was published by the same publisher in the same year. [13] The author was interviewed on the NPR program Talk of the Nation in August 2000 about his book, and said that the 1996 film Swingers represented a resurgence of swing culture in the United States. [14] By February 2001, Judge's book had become a bestseller in the United States. [9] Judge subsequently published other books including Damn Senators , [15] [16] God and Man at Georgetown Prep (2005), [17] [18] and A Tremor of Bliss: Sex, Catholicism, and Rock 'n' Roll (2010). [19] [20]
If It Ain't Got That Swing received a negative book review from Library Journal , which observed the author advocated a society in the United States represented by Leave It to Beaver . [2] The book review described the author's writing style as "meandering pages". [2] The review concluded, "Displaying little knowledge or understanding of past or current American culture, Judge presents a sophomoric, opinionated diatribe that offers little to any reader." [2]
Kirkus Reviews published a critical book review of If It Ain't Got That Swing, commenting that the author's writing style "has a tone of moral penitence and self-righteousness." [1] Kirkus Reviews concluded, "In the end, his diatribe comes to resemble a rant." [1] The book review characterized Judge's work as, "Ambitious pop-cult criticism that fails because of its single-mindedness and humorlessness." [1]
Judge's work garnered a book review from The Wall Street Journal , which wrote of the author's argument that swing dancing could improve American culture: "There is much that is persuasive in this argument, but it is incomplete." [4] The review pointed out factual errors in Judge's writing, such as that dancing in public was curtailed after a U.S. tax on nightclubs in 1944. [4] The Wall Street Journal pointed out that Judge's view of swing dancing as a way to improve civil discourse in American culture, led him to falsely conflate early swing dancing with a completely different later period of swing dancing culture. [4] The Washington Post recommended the book, and classed it among others on the topic including Dance of Days, Our Band Could Be Your Life, and D.C. Hand Dance. [8]
Jesse Walker reviewed If It Ain't Got That Swing for Reason . [3] Walker wrote that Judge "gets the genealogy of neo-swing wrong, and that he does so precisely because he's trying to reduce a complex phenomenon to a simple explanation." [3] Walker criticized Judge's "distorted chronology" about the evolution of the swing revival, citing factual inaccuracies in the presentation of swing dance history in the book. [3] He said that the swing revival "obviously predated" the Gap Inc. commercial. [3] He argued that Judge wrote from a stance of narcissism. [3] The Reason book review concluded, "His new book's subtitle may invoke 'grown-up culture,' but his prose betrays him: He writes like he's going through a stage." [3]
In the United States, new bestsellers include – If It Ain't Got That Swing: The Rebirth of Grown-up Culture, by Mark Gauvreau Judge. It argues that the pre-babyboomer generations were happy to appear suave and adult, a culture superseded by the teenager sensibility of rock`n'roll.
My favorite part of 'Damn Senators' was learning who Joe Judge was, a person who I really hadn't heard of.