Making Congregational Music Local in Christian Communities Worldwide
- Editor: Ingalls, Monique Marie
- Editor: Reigersberg, Muriel Swijghuisen
- Editor: Sherinian, Zoe C.
Book
$56.25Printed on demand
Contents
- Introduction: Music as local and global positioning: how congregational music-making produces the local in Christian communities worldwide, Monique M. Ingalls, Muriel Swijghuisen Reigersberg and Zoe C. Sherinian
- PART I: Engaging musical pasts: continuity and change in congregational song practices
- 1 The saints who sing and dance: enchanting subjunctive visions in Southeast Brazil, Suzel Ana Reily
- 2 Indigenizing Navajo hymns: explaining the fame of Elizabeth and Virginia, Kimberly Jenkins Marshall
- 3 Give us a piece of that Old Time Religion: why mainline Protestants are (re)claiming an evangelical musical heritage, Deborah Justice
- PART II: Congregational music and the politics of indigeneity
- 4 Song as gift and capital: intercultural processes of indigenization and spiritual transvaluation in Yolngu Christian music, Fiona Magowan
- 5 Performing glocal liturgies: the Second Vatican Council and musical inculturation in East Africa, Nicholas Ssempijja
- 6 Inculturation, institutions, and the creation of a localized congregational repertoire in Indonesia, Marzanna Poplawska
- PART III: Rifts, reconciliation, and coexistence: congregational music-making in the diverse locale
- 7 Sounds of localisation in South African Anglican church music: some examples of transformation at the College of the Transfiguration in Grahamstown, Andrew-John Bethke
- 8 Secular-sacred interface: The Lisu farmer chorus and the cultural politics of representation of minority culture in Yunnan's Northwestern Nujiang Prefecture, Diao Ying
- 9 Interreligious music networks: capitalizing on Balinese gamelan, Dustin D. Wiebe
- PART IV: Christian musical cosmopolitanisms: producing the local across racial and national lines
- 10 Congregational song and musical 'accommodation' in a South African Lutheran parish, Laryss