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Protest, media and culture.
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Annotation
Songs of Social Protest is a comprehensive, cutting-edge companion guide to music and social protest globally. Bringing together established and emerging scholars from a range of fields, it explores a wide range of examples of, and contexts for, songs and their performance that have been deployed as part of local, regional and global social protest movements.
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Table of Contents
- Cover
- Songs of Social Protest
- Series page
- Songs of Social Protest: International Perspectives
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Protest and the
African American Experience
- Chapter 1
- Social Protest and Resistance in African American Song
- The Oral Tradition
- Language
- Georgia Sea Island Singers
- From Jim Crow to the Civil Rights Movement
- Conclusions
- Notes
- Chapter 2
- “You’ll Never Hear Kumbaya the Same Way Again”
- Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel?
- Come By Hyar
- Which Side Are You On?
- Singing Their Freedom
- The Kumbaya Law
- Black Liberation Then and Now
- Taking Back “the real Kumbaya”
- Notes
- Chapter 3
- Billie Holiday’s Popular Front Songs of Protest
- “Strange Fruit,” Café Society and the Left
- “High Art” From Below
- “Strange Fruit” for Billie Holiday
- God Bless the Child
- Race, Class, and the Musician as Organic Intellectual
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Protest Genealogies
- Chapter 4
- Songs of Social Protest, Then and Now
- Sociology and Music
- Songs and Protest
- Charismatic Leaders and the Transformation of Folk Songs
- Social Movements
- Popular Music as Protest Music
- Conclusion
- Note
- Chapter 5
- Pete Seeger and the Politics of Participation
- The Road to a Constructionist Approach
- Rethinking “Political Music”
- Audience Participation as Democratic Practice
- Theorizing Audience Participation
- Adorno Redux
- Notes
- Chapter 6
- The Radicalisation of Phil Ochs, the Radicalisation of the Sixties
- The Birth of a Radical
- Reform, Resistance, Revolution
- Radical Reform and Civil Rights
- Student Power and Resistance
- Goodbye to All That Liberalism
- The Ringing of Revolution
- Conclusion
- Chapter 7
- Ewan MacColl’s Radio Ballads as Songs of Social Protest
- Ewan MacColl: from dramatist to songwriter
- The Radio Ballad concept
- John Axon and the poetry of everyday speech
- Work and identity
- Tape editing and heteroglossia
- Against pop culture: On the Edge (1963)
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 8
- ‘Message Songs are a Drag’
- Notes
- Transforming Traditions
- Chapter 9
- Expressions of Māʻohi-ness in Contemporary Tahitian Popular Music
- Expressions of Political and Social Protest in Tahiti
- The Māʻohi Cultural Identity
- The Tahitian Musical Landscape
- Henri Hiro and his Intellectual Descendants
- Orality
- ʻAparima, Literature and Traditional Arts
- Bobby Holcomb
- Aldo Raveino
- The Emergence of a new Generation of Musicians
- Notes
- Chapter 10
- Casteism and Cultural Capital
- Religious Songs as Social Songs
- Songs of Mysticism
- Songs of Devotion
- Devotion as Obedience
- Spiritual Autonomy
- Moral Transformation as Societal Transformation
- Dietary Abstinence and “Sanskritization”
- Purity as Resistance
- The Reformation of a Criminal Caste
- Rediscovering “Roots”
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 11
- Singing Against the Empire
- Licentiousness, Power and Possibility: Understanding the Anti-structure of Song
- Máire Bhuí Ní Laeire (Yellow Mary O’Leary) and Singing Anti-colonial Discourse in Nineteenth-century Ireland
- Moments in Time (Out of Time): Oral Performance, the Narrative of the Past and Contemporary Political Mobilisation Through Song
- Conclusion: Performance, Regeneration and Traditions of Thought in Orality
- Notes
- Freedom and Autonomy
- Chapter 12
- “Organic Intellectuals”
- The Emancipatory Role of Protest Songs: Theoretical Insights
- The Portuguese Dictatorship: Establishing Hegemony
- The Emergence of Protest Songs in Portugal
- Resisting Salazarism Through Music: Deconstructing Hegemonic Narratives
- Impact of Protest Songs
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 13
- Singing Protest in Post-war Italy
- The Birth of the Canzone d’Autore
- Dominance of Lyrics over Music in the Canzone d’Autore
- Cantautori as Public Intellectuals
- Lyrics and Social Impact
- Fabrizio De André
- The Social Impact of De André’s Work Constructed through his Lyrics
- Storia di un Impiegato (Story of a White-Collar Worker)
- Le Nuvole—A side
- Dialects as a Means of Resistance: Indiano and Crêuza de Mä
- Le Nuvole—B side
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 14
- The Trajectory of Protest Song from Dictatorship to Democracy and the Independence Movement in Catalonia
- Catalan New Song, the Beginnings
- “L’Estaca” 1968. The Musical and Lyrical Appeal of the Song
- After “L’Estaca”: Repression of Catalan New Song
- The Transitional Period and Democracy in Spain
- Rejection of Catalan New Song: Is There a Place for Protest Song in a Democratic Society?
- The Independence Movement in Catalonia
- Contemporary Catalan Musical Production
- Notes
- Chapter 15
- Making the Everyday Political
- State Formation: A Historical and Socio-Political Contextualisation
- Sampling Methods and Analysis Procedures
- Song-Performances in the Protest Movement for Telangana State Formation: Gaddar
- Venkanna and the Performance of Boundaries
- Padmavathi and Student Protests
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Politics, Participation and Activism in the Field
- Chapter 16
- “Freedom is a Constant Struggle”
- “Where have all the protest songs gone?”: (In)Audibility In Social Movement Theory
- Musical Performance and APF’s Emergence
- The Liberation Song in South Africa
- Adapting Freedom Songs Post-Apartheid
- “It will go down as far as your own strength”: Singing APF’s Declining Years
- Music In the Wake of Mobilisation
- Notes
- Chapter 17
- Cultural Production as a Political Act
- The Production of Art as a Political Act
- Bandista, A Music Collective
- Street, Square, Night: Collectiveness in Production
- Composing: Transferring, translating, taking from collective memory
- Writing the lyrics: Completing each other’s sentences
- Playing, singing, recording
- Sharing the songs, expanding the collective
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 18
- Hip-Hop as Civil Society
- Ugandan Hip Hop and the Informal Civil
- Hip Hop Identity and Community: Spaces of Activism
- Escapism and Excess: The Site of the Oppositional
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Semiotics, Mediation and Manipulation
- Chapter 19
- BOOM! Goes the Global Protest Movement
- System of A Down
- Violence
- Persona
- Detachment
- Analysis of the song
- Analysis of the video
- Director Michael Moore
- Industry
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 20
- Pussy Riot
- Pussy Riot and the Avant-Garde
- Pussy Riot and Riot Grrrl
- Performing “Punkness”
- Response from the West
- Pussy Riot in Russia
- Performance in the Media
- From Black Lives Matter to Global Appropriation
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 21
- Camp Fascism
- Camp Fascism as Protest
- Identifying Industrial Music
- Protesting Neoliberal Control: Throbbing Gristle, Laibach and Marilyn Manson
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 22
- Protest Songs, Social Media and the Exploitation of Syrian Children
- The Syrian Conflict
- Children and War
- Music and War
- Syria’s Songs of War
- Methods
- Syrian Children’s War Songs
- Unshūdat Aṭfāl al-Shām أنشودة اطفال الشّام
- Abkī ‘ala Shām il-Hawa أبكي على شام الهوى
- Nasmat al-Thawra نسمة الثورة
- Firqat Barā‘im al-Thawra30 فرقة براعم الثورة
- The Child Abbas الطفل عباس
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Protesting Bodies and Embodiment
- Chapter 23
- “Bread and Roses”
- Bread and Roses and The Lawrence Textile Strike
- A Socio-Musical Lens: Adorno on Protest Music
- Dialectical Musical Meaning
- Considering ‘Bread and Roses’ through a Musicological Prism
- Collective Singing
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 24
- “We Shall Overcome”
- A Brief History
- Pete Seeger and “We Shall Overcome”
- Overall Importance of the “Freedom Songs”
- Rhythm, Freedom Songs and Entrainment
- Song, Singing and Communal Identity
- Song, Community and Communal Performance
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Borderlands and Contested Spaces
- Chapter 25
- The Language We Use
- “I face my race”: Representing Morrissey as Protest Singer in the Borderlands
- Ozomatli’s Gay Vatos in Love as Celebratory Protest: What’s Morrissey Got to Do With It?
- ‘He sings about me, and I like his style:’ Morrissey and Trans-Butch Protest in Whittier Boulevard
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 26
- Rising from the Ashes of “The Grove”
- Methodology
- Contextualizing Chávez Ravine
- Protest songs of Chávez Ravine
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 27
- Mariem Hassan, Nubenegna Records and the Western Saharawi Struggle
- Contextualisation of Hassan’s music in the Western Saharawi refugee camps in Algeria
- Nubenegra and Hassan: A story of political support through Western Saharawi protest songs
- The study of cross-cultural music and protest songs
- Mediation as a way of analysing the interaction between musicians for the preparation of musical performances
- Collective communication as a form of mediation: Musical construction in Hassan’s performance of El Aaiun Egdat
- Main musical arrangements produced by each musician for live performances and which differed from their contribution in the album El Aaiun Egdat
- Another form of collective communication: Interactive live performances as a trio at Festival du Sahel (Senegal)
- Representing Hassan’s music and her political cause: Stage talk to present songs during musical performances
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Critiquing Capitalism and the Neoliberal Tide
- Chapter 28
- Against the Grain
- Ireland a Middle-Class Nation?
- Boom & Bust in Ireland—Hegemonic Discourses
- Counter Hegemonic Discourses
- Damien Dempsey—A Class Warrior?
- Re-imagining “Celtic Tiger” Ireland
- Old Materials, New Contexts, Irish Cosmopolitanism
- ‘Community’—Challenging the Hegemony of ‘Economy’
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 29
- Bail Out—From Now to Never—
A Rhetorical Analysis of Two Songs About Economic Crisis
- Reggae as Protest Music
- Artists and Background
- Walter Rodney and International Debt Relief and Economic Crisis in Jamaica
- International Debt Relief and Economic Crisis in Greece
- Big Youth Bail Out
- Now To Never by One Drop Forward
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 30
- The Cacophony of Critique
- New Model Army: A Tradition of Protest
- Protest and Critique
- NMA’s Lyrics
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Ideology and the Performer
- Chapter 31
- “Aesthetics of Resistance”1
- Social Protest
- Song as a Mechanism of Protest
- Billy Bragg
- Ideology
- Meritocracy: A Fair and Equitable Society?
- Ideology: A Reading
- Conclusions
- Notes
- Chapter 32
- Straight to Hell
- “Something about England”
- Broadway
- Lost in the Supermarket
- Up in Heaven (Not Only Here)
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Chapter 33
- The Truth Must be Told So I’ll Tell It
- Paddy’s Lamentation
- Ewan MacColl and the British Folk Revival
- Woody Guthrie and the US Protest Tradition
- Conclusion: the Transmission of Tradition as Radical Praxis
- Notes
- Discography/ Filmography
- Bibliography
- Index
- Contributors
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