Heidi M. Altman is an associate professor in the department of Sociology and Anthropology at Georgia Southern University. Jonathan H. Harwell is associate director of collection and resource services at the Ina Dillard Russell Library at Georgia College and State University.
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Introduction Heidi M. Altman and Jonathan H. Harwell 1.How Long? Habakkuk the Prophet as Proto-Protest Singer Andrew Zack Lewis 2.Already and Not Yet: Eschatology in Brazilian Protest Songs (1960s-1990s) Joezer de Souza Mendonca and Allan Macedo de Novaes 3.From "We Shall Overcome" to "We Gon' Be Alright:" How Social Movement Styles Influence Black Liberation Protest Music Shaonta' E. Allen 4.A Continuing Call from the Voice in the Wilderness: Jay-Z's "Spiritual" Rev. Santarvis Brown and Brent Swanson 5.From Ghetto to Gods, from Protest to Priest: The (Pro)creative Transformation of Self in Five Percenter Rap and Its Analogies to Sapiental Traditions in Islamic Theology Martin Abdel Matin Gansinger 6.Wholeness and Hoeness: The Protest for Black Women's Sexual Liberation Ristina Gooden 7."To Rise Beyond Jesus": Heavy Metal as Anti-Theological Protest Jackson T. Reinhardt 8.Howard Thurman and the Meaning of Jazz Daryl Russell Grigsby 9.Conjuring in the Concert Hall: Pedrito Martinez's Bata Drumming in Wynton Marsalis' Ochas Concert Hannah Marie Junco 10.Free Your Mind: Funkadelic and the Nitty-Gritty Hermeneutic Kyle E. Brooks 11."Mother, Mother...": Contemplating Wounds with Marvin Gaye's What's Going On, Fifty Years Later Carrie Rehak 12.Singing the Stories of Our Lives: Protest and Praise Catherine Roma Epilogue Catherine Roma with Ysaye Maria Barnwell
These passionate essays show us that music can do powerful theological work, and remind us how religious concerns have shaped the musical imagination of dissidents and activists across time and space. Ranging from the prophets Habbakuk and Howard Thurman to Wynton Marsalis and Megan Thee Stallion, the best of these essays combine erudite theological meditations with fine-grained analyses of particular song forms, genres and social movements. Overall, this book provides an ear-opening guide to the fractures and altercations that characterize our deeply fraught historical moment. -- David W. Stowe, Michigan State University