This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu.
This title is no longer available from this publisher at this time. To let the publisher know you are interested in the title, please email bv-help@uchicago.edu.
Bangkok after Dark: Maurice Rocco, Transnational Nightlife, and the Making of Cold War Intimacies
Bangkok after Dark: Maurice Rocco, Transnational Nightlife, and the Making of Cold War Intimacies
by Benjamin Tausig
Duke University Press, 2025 eISBN: 978-1-4780-6068-0 | Paper: 978-1-4780-3170-3 | Cloth: 978-1-4780-2847-5
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
From the 1930s to the 1950s, jazz pianist Maurice Rocco was a mainstay in Hollywood and American nightlife scenes. As rock and roll surpassed jazz as America’s most popular music in the 1950s, the queer Black pianist’s fortunes faded and he was forced to go abroad for new opportunities. In 1964 Rocco ultimately settled in Bangkok, where he thrived and enjoyed a relatively privileged life until he was murdered by two young male sex workers in 1976. In Bangkok after Dark, Benjamin Tausig uses Rocco’s intriguing story to trace the history of transnational nightlife encounters between Thais and Americans during the long Vietnam War. Tausig shows how these encounters, which included musical collaborations, romantic and sexual relationships, and new labor, identity, and geopolitical configurations, remade Thailand in crucial and enduring ways. As Tausig demonstrates, Rocco’s Blackness, queerness, and musical life in Thailand illuminates how Thai-American relationships complicated neat distinctions between the two countries. In teasing out these relationships through the figure of Rocco, Tausig challenges conventional understandings of the global Cold War on individual and transnational scales.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Benjamin Tausig is Associate Professor of Music at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, and the author of Bangkok is Ringing: Sound, Protest, and Constraint.
REVIEWS
“In this unique and important book, Benjamin Tausig tells the compelling journey of one black, queer American man, whose biography Tausig uses as a vehicle for another story about capitalist development in Thailand during the Cold War. We learn about the cultural effects of the US fiscal and military presence in Thailand, the development of and changes to colorism, racial, and farang identities in Thailand, the significance of the local and global circulation of musical genres, and much more. Bangkok after Dark is magnificent.”
-- Tamara Loos, author of Bones around My Neck: The Life and Exile of a Prince Provocateur