Description

Book Synopsis
Explores the complex ideas about race, racism, and racial identity that have grown up among Afro-Brazilians in the black music scene

Trade Review
"Burdick writes with an evocative clarity that allows the context and voices of his informants to shine through. His commitment to them and his passion for racial justice drive the account of his research." * Pneuma *
"Overall, this work is an admirable achievement.-," -- David Lehmann * Cambridge University Press *
"Reading John Burdicks The Color of Sound reminded me that the Queen of Gospel, Mahalia Jackson, sang the legendary hymn 'How I Got Over' just minutes after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his 'I Have a Dream Speech' at the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. Burdick delivers an evocative book full of fresh insights, analyzing how religious music makers and black gospel have the potential to create deeply meaningful and positive new politically engaged black and Afro-Brazilian identities in Brazil." -- Donna M. Goldstein,author of Laughter Out of Place
"

Reveals the little-studied, but vast realm of transnational Christian popular music that circulates outside of mainstream channels. Burdicks evocative study of the vibrant scene of black evangelical music in São Paulo invites us to rethink notions of sonic performance, its relation to the body, and its reverberations in a modern urban society fraught by durable racial and social inequalities. Combining a richly textured ethnography with novel theoretical insights, this book points to new directions in the study of race, space, and faith in Brazilian culture.

" -- Christopher Dunn,Tulane University

Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction: Something 'Bout the Name of Jesus: Racial Meanings in Evangelical Musical Scenes 1 We Are the Modern Levites: Three Gospel Music Scenes 2 We Are All One in the Periferia: Blackness, Place, and Poverty in Gospel Rap 3 The Flags of Jesus and Brazil: Body, History, and Nation in Samba Gospel 4 A Voice So Full of Pain and Power: Black Gospel and Blackness 5 The Bible Is Full of Prophecies: Black Evangelical Musicians and Black Politics Conclusion: Evangelicalism, Blackness, and Music in Brazil Notes References Index About the Author

The Color of Sound Race Religion and Music in

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    A Hardback by John Burdick

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      View other formats and editions of The Color of Sound Race Religion and Music in by John Burdick

      Publisher: New York University Press
      Publication Date: 07/01/2013
      ISBN13: 9780814709221, 978-0814709221
      ISBN10: 0814709222

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Explores the complex ideas about race, racism, and racial identity that have grown up among Afro-Brazilians in the black music scene

      Trade Review
      "Burdick writes with an evocative clarity that allows the context and voices of his informants to shine through. His commitment to them and his passion for racial justice drive the account of his research." * Pneuma *
      "Overall, this work is an admirable achievement.-," -- David Lehmann * Cambridge University Press *
      "Reading John Burdicks The Color of Sound reminded me that the Queen of Gospel, Mahalia Jackson, sang the legendary hymn 'How I Got Over' just minutes after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his 'I Have a Dream Speech' at the historic March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963. Burdick delivers an evocative book full of fresh insights, analyzing how religious music makers and black gospel have the potential to create deeply meaningful and positive new politically engaged black and Afro-Brazilian identities in Brazil." -- Donna M. Goldstein,author of Laughter Out of Place
      "

      Reveals the little-studied, but vast realm of transnational Christian popular music that circulates outside of mainstream channels. Burdicks evocative study of the vibrant scene of black evangelical music in São Paulo invites us to rethink notions of sonic performance, its relation to the body, and its reverberations in a modern urban society fraught by durable racial and social inequalities. Combining a richly textured ethnography with novel theoretical insights, this book points to new directions in the study of race, space, and faith in Brazilian culture.

      " -- Christopher Dunn,Tulane University

      Table of Contents
      Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction: Something 'Bout the Name of Jesus: Racial Meanings in Evangelical Musical Scenes 1 We Are the Modern Levites: Three Gospel Music Scenes 2 We Are All One in the Periferia: Blackness, Place, and Poverty in Gospel Rap 3 The Flags of Jesus and Brazil: Body, History, and Nation in Samba Gospel 4 A Voice So Full of Pain and Power: Black Gospel and Blackness 5 The Bible Is Full of Prophecies: Black Evangelical Musicians and Black Politics Conclusion: Evangelicalism, Blackness, and Music in Brazil Notes References Index About the Author

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