'Disease is unrhythmical': jazz, health, and disability in 1920s America

Health History. 2011;13(2):13-42. doi: 10.5401/healthhist.13.2.0013.

Abstract

The 1920s in the United States are commonly remembered as the Jazz Age. Although historians have focused on the African American origins of the music, another theme was also prominent in the public discourse surrounding jazz: disability. Critics saw jazz and its associated dances as defective, causing both mental and physical impairments in their devotees. In other words, jazz music and dance were disabled and disabling. Proponents of jazz responded in kind, asserting that jazz did not cause impairments, it cured them; similarly, jazz was not defective music or dance, but a revitalisation of the art forms. On the one hand, these reactions might have been expected, given the long history of belief in a relationship between music and health. However, the importance of health issues such as eugenics and rehabilitation in the 1920s also clearly influenced the responses of opinion leaders, politicians, academics, music professionals, and others to jazz music and dance.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Attitude to Health*
  • Dancing / history*
  • Disabled Persons / history*
  • History, 20th Century
  • Humans
  • Music / history*
  • Social Values / history*
  • United States