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[Commlist] cfp Popular Music Special issue: Popular Music and Populism
Thu Sep 03 15:24:55 GMT 2020
Popular Music and Populism
Populism has been researched from a great array of disciplines in the
humanities and social sciences over the last decades. In musicology and
popular music studies, however, the concept has been relatively
neglected so far. This is all the more surprising since populism and
music have been intricately connected at least since the
nineteenth-century populist movement in the U.S. (Patch 2016; Kazin
2017), and popular music studies have a long tradition of research into
music and politics (Street 2017; Garratt 2019), subcultures and
counter-cultural movements that challenge the hegemonic ‘power bloc’
(Clarke et. al. 1975; Hebdige 1979; Eyerman and Jamison 1995). This
special issue, therefore, seeks to explore the nexus between popular
music and populism.
Research on populism is complicated by the concept’s ambivalence.
Populism has been defined as a democratic movement (Goodwyn 1976), an
emancipatory resource (Laclau 2005), a political strategy (Weyland
2017), an economic policy (Dornbusch and Edwards 1992), a communication
style (Block and Negrine 2017), or an ideology (Mudde and Kaltwasser
2017). Due to its wide scope, populism has been subdivided into various
classifications, including inclusionary, exclusionary, right-wing,
left-wing, nineteenth-century, contemporary, US, South-American, and
European varieties. However, although populist movements assume highly
diverse shapes across the world, they share a common ideological core
based on a dichotomous understanding of a basic conflict between the two
antagonistic camps of the essentially ‘good’ people and an inherently
corrupt elite. As Michael Kazin (2017) has noted, populism’s power lies
precisely in its adaptability.
As a result of the term’s polyvalence, a large number of musicians and
musical cultures have been labelled populist. In the U.S., examples
range from ideologically diverse phenomena such as 1880s farmers’ songs,
Woody Guthrie, and Aaron Copland’s ‘Billy the Kid’ to Kid Rock’s ‘Born
Free’ and the Trump-glorifying genre ‘Fashwave’. Elsewhere, examples of
musicians who have been described as populist include celebrity singers
such as Morrissey (UK), Fabrizio de André (Italy), Andreas Gabalier and
Hannah (Austria); iconic rappers like Krúbi (Hungary), Piotr
Liroy-Marzec (Poland) and Ricardo Alves (Brazil); as well as neo-folk
and rock bands such as Böhse Onkelz (Germany), Les Brigandes (France)
and frei.wild (Italy). A critical understanding of populism would help
us to disentangle these diverse musical practices while revealing
heretofore overlooked similarities.
In addition to investigating the populism of music and musical actors,
another way to approach the interconnection between popular music and
populism is to explore how populist politicians have employed music.
Some of the political forerunners of the recent rise of populism in
Europe, such as Silvio Berlusconi (Italy) and Jörg Haider (Austria),
performed as singers of popular songs. Likewise, the front-runner of the
far-right populist Sweden Democrats, Jimmie Åkesson, plays in a pop band
that performs light-hearted tunes with nationalist content, and his
party organizes an annual summer festival. In Germany, the far-right
populist Alternative for Germany plays German-language R&B tracks by
celebrity singers such as Xavier Naidoo to support their marches against
what they call the ‘islamisation of the Occident’.
Conversely, popular music has by no means been employed exclusively by
the populist far-right. The Chavéz government, for instance, tapped into
Alí Primea’s musical legacy for its political purposes in Venezuela in
the 1990s (Marsh 2016), and the 2013 Gezi Park protests in Turkey used
popular music in the populist strategy to authenticate the
demonstrations as an anti-establishment movement of ‘the people’ (Way
2016). In Italy, the founder of the initially left-leaning Five Star
Movement, Beppe Grillo, organized ‘Five Star Woodstock’ events years
before his party formed a coalition with the far-right Lega.
This special issue, therefore, seeks to bring together different
understandings of populism and foster a dialogue regarding the roles of
popular music in the development of populist movements from a
transnational perspective. We invite submissions for this special issue
of /Popular Music/ that investigate the interconnection of populism and
popular music in different historical and geographical contexts.
How exactly does popular music interact with and negotiate populist
ideologies? How do musical sounds, lyrics, performances, and visuals
articulate populist politics? And how can investigations of popular
music contribute to developing a better understanding of populism as a
cultural phenomenon?
We are looking for a range of international and interdisciplinary
contributions from different perspectives, including popular music
studies, ethnomusicology, and cultural sociology. Questions to be raised
and explored in this issue may include:
- The epistemology of musical populism
- The interaction of popular music with different varieties of populism
- The role of popular music in the dissemination of populism
- The appropriation of popular music by populist parties and political
actors
- Musicians and performers as voice of ‘the people’
- Performing varieties of the ‘good’ people and the ‘corrupt elite#
- The role of antagonisms and enmity in populism and popular music
- Similarities and differences between populist strategies and music
marketing practices (e.g. breaking taboos, scandalizing)
- Populism and celebrity music culture
- Music and identity in populist movements regarding intersections of
gender, class, race, nation, and sexuality
- The conceptual gendering and racialization of (musical) populism,
including notions of (toxic) masculinity and whiteness
- Populist aesthetics and performance practices
- Fan cultures and populism / populist fan cultures
Please send abstracts (500 words max, including references), bios (150
words max), and queries to special issue editors:
Prof. Dr. Mario Dunkel (Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg,
Germany, (mario.dunkel /at/ uol.de) <mailto:(mario.dunkel /at/ uol.de)>)
Dr. Melanie Schiller (University of Groningen, The Netherlands,
(m.m.schiller /at/ rug.nl) <mailto:(m.m.schiller /at/ rug.nl)>).
Abstracts must include a main argument, an indicative title, a critical
engagement with relevant literature, an indication of significance, and
references.
Deadline for abstracts and short bios: 15 November 2020
Commissioning of articles: January 2021
Submission of full articles (1st submission): 30 June 2021
Publication of the issue scheduled for autumn 2022 (41:4).
No APCs required - see
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/popular-music/information/author-publishing-agreement
for policy
References
Block, E., and Negrine, R. 2017. ‘The Populist Communication Style:
Toward a Critical Framework’, /International Journal of Communication/,
11, pp. 178-197
Clarke, J., Hall S., Jefferson, T., and Roberts, B. 1975. ‘Subcultures,
cultures, and class: a theoretical overview’, in /Resistance through
Rituals: Youth Subcultures in Post-War Britain/, ed. S. Hall and T.
Jefferson (London, Routledge), pp. 9-34
Dornbusch, R., and Edwards, S. 1992. /The Macroeconomics of Populism in
America/ (Chicago, IL, University of Chicago Press)
Eyerman, R., and Jamison, A. 1995. ‘Social movements and cultural
transformation: Popular music in the 1960s’, /Media, Culture & Society/,
17, pp. 449–468
Garratt, J. 2019. /Music and Politics: A Critical
Introduction/ (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press)
Goodwyn, L. 1976. /Democratic Promise: The Populist Moment in
America/ (Oxford, Oxford University Press)
Hebdige, D. 1979. /Subculture: The Meaning of Style/ (London, Routledge)
Kazin, M. 2017. /The Populist Persuasion: An American History/ (Ithaca,
NY, Cornell University Press)
Laclau, E. 2005. /On Populist Reason/ (London, Verso)
Marsh, H. 2016. /Hugo Chávez, Alí Primera and Venezuela: The Politics of
Music in Latin //America/ (London, Palgrave Macmillan)
Mudde, C., and Kaltwasser, C. R. 2017. /Populism: A Very Short
Introduction/ (Oxford, Oxford University Press)
Patch, J. 2016. ‘Notes on deconstructing the populism: Music on the
campaign trail, 2012 and 2016’, /American Music/, 34, pp. 365-401.
Street, J. 2017. /Music & Politics/ (Cambridge, Polity)
Way, L. C. S. 2016. ‘Protest music, populism, politics and
authenticity’, /Journal of Language and Politics/, 15, pp. 422-445
Weyland, K. 2017. ‘Populism: a political-strategic approach’, in/The
Oxford Handbook of Populism/, ed. C. R. Kaltwasser et al. (New York,
Oxford University Press), pp. 48-72.
--
dr. Melanie Schiller ǀ Assistant Professor of Media Studies and Popular
Music ǀ Dept. of Arts, Culture and Media ǀ Faculty of Arts ǀ
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen ǀ Office: Oude Boteringestraat 34, 9712 GK
Groningen ǀ The Netherlands ǀ Room 105 ǀ +31 50 363 6078 ǀ
*Now out on paperback:* /Soundtracking Germany. Popular Music and
National Identity/ (Rowman and Littlefield Int.)
<https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781786606228/Soundtracking-Germany-Popular-Music-and-National-Identity>
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