TY - JOUR TI - Recepcja amerykańskiego jazzu w Japonii: zarys problematyki AU - Kwaczyńska, Olga TI - Recepcja amerykańskiego jazzu w Japonii: zarys problematyki AB - The Reception of American Jazz in Japan: An Outline of the Problem The following article presents the history of Japanese jazz from the first musical contacts to contemporary successes and problems of the jazz music market. For the development and evolution of jazz in Japan, an important role was played by the presence of American military forces in the Philippines (even before the post-war occupation of Japan), which as an American dependent territory had the opportunity to remain in cultural contacts with the United States, where jazz was born at the beginning of the 20th century and became one of the most popular forms of music. Beside the contact with Filipino musicians, who were the first from whom the Japanese learned jazz, the establishment and development of jazz cafes (jazzu-kissa) were also important for the development of jazz in the Land of the Cherry Blossom, which played a huge role in the strengthening the interest in jazz and the shaping of musical tastes. The article also shows the influence of jazz on the formation of a modern, American-based lifestyle of middle-class representatives in Japan. In addition, the article discusses the complex issue of the authenticity of Japanese jazz in relation to American jazz and the influence of world-famous Japanese musicians, such as Toshiko Akiyoshi, on overcoming a given stereotype. The aim of the article is to show the universality and at the same time the locality of contemporary Japanese jazz as well as to show what the specificity of jazz in Japan is. VL - 2020 IS - Numer 44 (1/2020) PY - 2020 SN - 2956-4107 C1 - 2353-7094 SP - 35 EP - 49 DO - 10.4467/23537094KMMUJ.20.002.12017 UR - https://ejournals.eu/czasopismo/kmmuj/artykul/recepcja-amerykanskiego-jazzu-w-japonii-zarys-problematyki KW - jazz KW - Japanese jazz KW - jazzu-kissa KW - local jazz scene KW - Japanese culture KW - American culture KW - Americanization KW - Toshiko Akiyoshi