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Second-line Marching Clubs: Inside New Orleans' Black Social Aid and Pleasure Clubs
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# : |
18271 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
10 / 1990 |
3,061 Words |
| Author
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William Jankowiak, Helen Regis, and Christina Turner William Jankowiak is assistant professor of anthropology at
Tulane University. Helen Regis and Christina Turner, both
graduate students in anthropology, were co-researchers for
this article. Currently they are working on a book on New
Orleans' black social aid and pleasure clubs. |
New Orleans is a city of festivals: Irish clubs parade on St. Patrick's Day, Italian groups on St. Joseph's Day, and krewes (carnival societies) on Mardi Gras. These celebrations contrast with second-line parades situated entirely in the city's black neighborhoods. The second-line parade style is completely unlike the aesthetic traditions embraced by other racial and ethnic groups. When a brass band swings down a street, a line quickly forms behind it with a crowd marching behind. The club, band, and second-liners are so tightly bonded together that the name of the parade derives from the nonclub participants who fall in with the club and join in the melee.
Second-lining is a unique syncretization of African and American cultural themes, but remains largely unknown to most scholars. Renowned musicians from Louis Armstrong to the Dirty Dozen Brass Band made their start playing for the anniversary and funeral parades of New Orleans' black social clubs.
While Mardi Gras is the city's premier tourist attraction, the second-line parades are ignored even by most New Orleanians. New Orleans celebrates Mardi Gras with a Romanesque extravagance, displaying wealth and social rank. The second-line marching clubs - formally known as social aid and pleasure clubs - are not part of Mardi Gras and never parade during the carnival season; they usually appear on the club's anniversary of founding day. During the autumn and late spring, there is at least one parade every other week. Unlike the playful inversion of reality created by the Mardi Gras krewes, who wear masks, dress in odd costumes, and give away plastic colored beads to the crowds, an image of stunning respectability is presented by the second-line clubs. Members wear expensive
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