Gayle Wald
#92,199
Most Influential Person Now
American academic specialising in music
Gayle Wald's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Communications
Gayle Wald's Degrees
- PhD American Studies University of Iowa
- Masters American Studies University of Iowa
- Bachelors English University of California, Berkeley
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Why Is Gayle Wald Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Gayle Wald is a professor of English and American Studies at George Washington University and a Guggenheim Fellow. From 1994-95 she was Visiting Assistant Professor of English and American Studies at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut.
Gayle Wald's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Just a Girl? Rock Music, Feminism, and the Cultural Construction of Female Youth (1998) (162)
- Crossing the line : racial passing in twentieth-century U.S. literature and culture (2000) (151)
- Soul Vibrations: Black Music and Black Freedom in Sound and Space (2011) (32)
- Liberated Threads: Black Women, Style, and the Global Politics of Soul (2016) (26)
- "I Want It That Way": Teenybopper Music and the Girling of Boy Bands (2002) (22)
- Rosetta Tharpe and Feminist “Un-Forgetting” (2009) (19)
- Shout, Sister, Shout!: The Untold Story of Rock-and-Roll Trailblazer Sister Rosetta Tharpe (2007) (15)
- “A Most Disagreeable Mirror”: Reflections on White Identity in Black Like Me (2000) (12)
- Native Daughters in the Promised Land: Gender, Race, and the Question of Separate Spheres (1998) (10)
- From Spirituals to Swing: Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Gospel Crossover (2003) (9)
- Clueless in the Neocolonial World Order (1999) (5)
- 2020 Keywords Symposium (2022) (3)
- It's Been Beautiful (2020) (3)
- Crossing the Line (2020) (2)
- “Deliver de Letter”: “Please Mr. Postman,” The Marvelettes, and the Afro‐Caribbean Imaginary (2012) (2)
- Book Reviews (2004) (1)
- Dilla Time (2022) (1)
- “It’s Awfully Important to Listen”: Ella Jenkins and Musical Multiculturalism (2020) (1)
- Introduction: Through the Ethnographic Looking Glass (2011) (1)
- Mezz Mezzrow and the Voluntary Negro Blues (2000) (1)
- “A queer black woman invented rock-and-roll”: Rosetta Tharpe, memes, and memory practices in the digital age (2020) (1)
- Reviving rosetta tharpe: performance and memory in the 21st century (2006) (1)
- Clueless in the neo-colonial world order (2015) (1)
- Along the Color Line: Memory, Community, Identity (1996) (1)
- Anna Deveare Smith's Voices at Twilight (1994) (1)
- Island Girl in a Rock-and-Roll World (2019) (0)
- More Meaningful Than a Three-Hour Lecture: Music on Soul! (2015) (0)
- "A Most Disagreeable Mirror": Reflections on White Identity in Black Like Me (2020) (0)
- The Black Community and the Affective Compact (2015) (0)
- Boundaries Lost and Found: Racial Passing and Cinematic Representation, circa 1949 (2000) (0)
- Crossing the Line (2018) (0)
- Introduction: Race, Passing, and Cultural Representation (2000) (0)
- Home Again: Racial Negotiations in Modernist African American Passing Narratives (2000) (0)
- Sherrie Tucker. Dance Floor Democracy: The Social Geography of Memory at the Hollywood Canteen. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014. Pp. 408. $26.95. (2015) (0)
- Passing Strange and Post-Civil Rights Blackness1 (2010) (0)
- "Gimme Gimme This, Gimme Gimme That”: Listening with, to, and through José Muñoz (2015) (0)
- Gospel Music (0)
- Freaks Like Us: Black Misfit Performance on Soul! (2015) (0)
- The Vestments and Investments of Race (2000) (0)
- It's Been Beautiful: Soul! and Black Power Television (2015) (0)
- The Nicest Kids in Town: American Bandstand, Rock ’n’ Roll, and the Struggle for Civil Rights in 1950s Philadelphia. By Matthew F. Delmont. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012./The Nicest Kids in Town digital project, http://scalar.usc.edu/nehvectors/nicest-kids/index. (2012) (0)
- “I’m Through with Passing”: Postpassing Narratives in Black Popular Literary Culture (2000) (0)
- Chris Raschka. The Cosmo‐Biography of Sun Ra: The Sound of Joy Is Enlightening. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press, 2014. 40 pp. $15.99 (Hardcover). (2014) (0)
- Epilogue: Passing, “Color Blindness,” and Contemporary Discourses of Race and Identity (2000) (0)
- The Racial State and the “Disappearance” of Soul! (2015) (0)
- ‘have a little talk’: listening to the b-side of history (2005) (0)
- Introduction: It’s Been Beautiful (2015) (0)
- Book Review: Stolen Time: Black Fad Performance and the Calypso Craze by Shane Vogel (2019) (0)
- Aaron Cohen, Move On Up: Chicago Soul Music and Black Cultural Power. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2019. Pp. 272. $90.00 (cloth); $20.00 (paper). (2020) (0)
- Soul! and the 1960s (2015) (0)
- Virtual Roundtable on “Empire” (2015) (0)
- Conclusion: Soul! at the Center (2015) (0)
- James Weldon Johnson's Modern Soundscapes Jazz Griots: Music as History in the 1960s African American Poem Black Resonance: Iconic Women Singers and African American Literature (2015) (0)
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