Abstract

This project employs Roland Barthes' narrative codes as a framework for textual analysis to examine the underlying structures and meanings within song lyrics from two contrasting traditions of country music: mass-mediated Nashville country and Texas Red Dirt. With a sample spanning a five-year period, the study explores how narrative forms reflect broader socio-cultural dynamics and economic forces. Drawing upon the critical theory of the Frankfurt School, particularly the works of Theodor Adorno and Karl Marx, the project concentrates on the commodification of cultural products and implications for authenticity and truth in cultural expression. Through a comparative analysis, the research reveals distinct patterns in how each musical tradition constructs narrative meaning, with Nashville country often aligning with commodified, formulaic storytelling, while Texas Red Dirt music tends to retain localized, less-commercialized narratives. This divergence underscores how market forces shape cultural production, ultimately influencing not only artistic form but also the perceived truth and authenticity of musical narratives.

Date of publication

Spring 2025

Document Type

Thesis

Language

english

Persistent identifier

http://hdl.handle.net/10950/4838

Committee members

Erik Gustafson, Terry Britt, Brent Yergensen

Degree

Master of Arts

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