Theology and Protest Music

Theology and Protest Music

Contributors

Forward by Jason C. Bivins Contributions by Shaonta’ E. Allen; Heidi M. Altman; Ysaye Maria Barnwell; Kyle E. Brooks; Rev. Santarvis Brown; Martin Abdel Matin Gansinger; Ristina Gooden; Daryl Russell Grigsby; Jonathan H. Harwell; Hannah Marie Junco; Andrew Zack Lewis; Joêzer De Souza Mendonça; Allan Macedo De Novaes; Carrie Rehak; Jackson T. Reinhardt; Catherine Roma and Brent Swanson

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Abstract

Songs of protest have been inspiring activists for millennia, and continue to be created, shared, and reworked across musical genres. From the prophet Habakkuk as proto-protest singer, through a broad spectrum of twentieth and twenty-first century artists and diverse faith traditions, Theology and Protest Music gathers compelling contributions that examine Brazilian eschatology, Black liberation and womanism, esoteric Islam in Five Percenter rap, heavy metal as anti-theology, Howard Thurman’s relevance to jazz, Cuban Santería priest Pedrito Martinez’ sacred Batá drumming, as well as theological reflections on Jay-Z, Funkadelic, Marvin Gaye, Sweet Honey in the Rock, and the social justice chorale movement. Those interested in theology and popular culture, as well as scholars of music, social justice, racial identity, LGBTQ+ studies, and gender studies will find new aspects of the broad spectrum of protest music and its diverse spiritual connections. Theology and Protest Music also features invited contributions by pioneering choral activist Catherine Roma and world-renowned performer, composer, and educator Dr. Ysaye Maria Barnwell.

Publication Date

3-2023

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield; Lexington Press

ISBN for this edition (13-digit)

978-1-9787-1344-4

ISBN for additional format (13-digit)

978-1-9787-1345-1

Comments

Georgia Southern University faculty member, Heidi Altman co-edited Theology and Protest Music.

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