"This study focuses on three singer-songwriters of French popular music who emerged in the 1950s. Combining a literary and socio-historical approach of texts and contexts, Olivier Bourderionnet examines the concept of chanson as a vibrant testimony to cultural shifts within French society in the second half of the twentieth century. The author also considers popular song as a new form of orality in French poetry while examining the post-surrealist blurring of frontiers between chanson and poetry in the effervescent and jazz ...
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"This study focuses on three singer-songwriters of French popular music who emerged in the 1950s. Combining a literary and socio-historical approach of texts and contexts, Olivier Bourderionnet examines the concept of chanson as a vibrant testimony to cultural shifts within French society in the second half of the twentieth century. The author also considers popular song as a new form of orality in French poetry while examining the post-surrealist blurring of frontiers between chanson and poetry in the effervescent and jazz-infused decades that followed World War II. He argues that this period points towards a liberation of language as well as to a changing conception of "literarity" at a time when the State is taking on the task of generalizing access to culture" -- Olivier Bourderionnet
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