Category: Racial Ideology
- The Jazz Music Decadence
The Jazz Music Decadence theory was a racist and civilizational panic that cast syncopated rhythm as a deliberate corrosive force capable of dissolving Western discipline, logic, morality, and social order. In some of its most explicit forms, critics described jazz as an invasive beat from the “Dark Continent,” framing African and African American musical forms not as artistic innovation but as hostile rhythm weaponry aimed at the nervous system and the moral faculties. The theory emerged in the early 1920s during the rapid spread of jazz and the broader cultural struggle over flappers, dance halls, race, youth, and modernity. Because jazz did visibly alter dance, leisure, and musical taste, it became a natural target for those who wanted to describe cultural change as intentional degeneration.