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[ecrea] Call for Chapters: Sacred Songs: Religion, Spirituality and the Divine in Popular Music Culture
Tue Jan 17 10:21:42 GMT 2017
Sacred Songs: Religion, Spirituality and the Divine in Popular Music Culture
In March 1966, The London Evening Standard published an interview with
John Lennon, entitled ‘How Does a Beatle Live? John Lennon Lives Like
This.’ During this interview Lennon remarked upon the relationship
between religion and popular music. “Christianity will go,’ he remarked,
‘it will vanish and shrink. I needn't argue about that; I'm right and I
will be proved right. We're more popular than Jesus now. I don't know
which will go first, rock ’n’ roll or Christianity.’
Lennon’s controversial remarks highlight an often-ambiguous
relationship between popular music and the sacred, where at different
points individual musicians have endorsed or forcefully rejected
religious ideologies via their music practice. For example George
Harrison’s close affiliation with the Hare Krishna Movement, Bob Dylan’s
return to Judaism, Cliff Richard’s open espousal of born again
Christianity and Kanye West’s recent lyrics proclaiming that ‘Jesus
walks with me.’ Entire popular music genres may reflect or help to
constitute sacred practices as illustrated by Reggae’s relationship with
Rastafarianism and Death Metal’s articulation of existential themes.
As Lennon observed during the 1960s, fans may elevate popular music
artists to the stature of spiritual leaders, looking to them for
guidance in uncertain times and sometimes dedicating their lives to
emulating and pursuing the rock gods. The quasi-religious character of
popular music genres and the role of the artists as avatars, are among
the topics Georgina Gregory (University of Central Lancashire) and Mike
Dines would like to explore in an upcoming volume on popular music
spirituality/religion and the sacred in contemporary culture.
We are especially interested in the variety of approaches to the
subject, which may include, but not restricted by the following themes:
· Role of religion in lives of artists within the popular music genre
· The incorporation of popular music in sacred ceremonies
· Religious metaphor in popular music
· Incorporation of religion within popular music practice
· Fandom as a form of worship
· Divinity and rock stardom (rock stars’ homes as sites of
pilgrimage, etc.)
· Pop memorabilia as holy relics
Those interested are encouraged to send proposals of up to 500 words via
email to Georgina Gregory on (GGregory /at/ uclan.ac.uk) or Mike Dines at
(miked71uk /at/ gmail.com) by 1st May 2017. Please included a brief biography.
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