Sonic Domination and the Politics of Race in Southern Antebellum Hymnody

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 N/A MUSIC Journal of the Society for American Music Pub Date : 2023-10-18 DOI:10.1017/s1752196323000275
Chase Castle
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Abstract

Abstract Religious music served a political function in the southern United States during the antebellum period. This article examines catechisms and hymnbooks used by white evangelical missionaries and slaveowners in the antebellum South, arguing that the planter elite deployed hymns as a medium to assert white supremacy. The term sonic domination identifies processes whereby sound functioned as a social tool to maintain discipline and order among the enslaved population. Black and white people sang hymns in church, at interracial revivals, and during civic services; they were also heard on bells and cited in poetry. English texts and tunes included in slave catechisms and white portrayals of Black singing highlight the role of evangelical hymns in maintaining plantation order in the Old South. At the same time, enslaved Black Christians found creative ways to circumvent the oppressive power of the white elite through song. African Americans employed English hymns in their own religious rituals and used them to convey hidden meanings on the plantation. Both genres, which interacted and ultimately influenced each other, contributed to an eventual codification of American evangelical hymnody.
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南方战前赞美诗中的声音支配与种族政治
在南北战争前的时期,宗教音乐在美国南部发挥了政治作用。本文研究了白人福音派传教士和南方奴隶主在内战前使用的教义问答和赞美诗,认为种植园主精英利用赞美诗作为维护白人至上主义的媒介。“声音统治”一词指的是声音作为一种社会工具在被奴役的人群中维持纪律和秩序的过程。黑人和白人在教堂、跨种族复兴活动和公民仪式上唱赞美诗;它们也被钟声和诗歌所引用。奴隶教义问答中的英语文本和曲调以及白人对黑人歌唱的描绘都突出了福音派赞美诗在维持旧南方种植园秩序方面的作用。与此同时,被奴役的黑人基督徒通过歌曲找到了创造性的方式来规避白人精英的压迫权力。非裔美国人在他们自己的宗教仪式中使用英语赞美诗,并用它们来传达种植园的隐藏含义。这两种流派相互作用,最终相互影响,最终促成了美国福音派赞美诗的编纂。
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CiteScore
0.90
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发文量
49
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