Our Subversive Voice - Street, John; Cox Jensen, Oskar; Finlayson, Alan; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Our Subversive Voice: The History and Politics of English Protest Songs, 1600?2020
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780228023722
ISBN10:0228023726
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:312 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 18 photos
700
Category:

Our Subversive Voice

The History and Politics of English Protest Songs, 1600?2020
 
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

Our Subversive Voice establishes the protest song as a mode of political communication. Covering five centuries in England?s history, from street ballads and art song to grime, hymns, music hall, and punk, this book explores the causes that protest songs adopt, the conditions that give rise to them, and the institutions that have suppressed them.

Long description:

Whether accompanying a march, a sit-in, or a confrontation with police, songs and protest are inextricably linked. As a tool for political activism, the protest song spells out the issues at the heart of each cause. Over a surprisingly long history, it has been used to spread ideas, inspire political imagination, and motivate political action.


The protest song is - and has always been - a form of political oratory as vital to political representation as it is to performance. Investigating five centuries of English history, Our Subversive Voice establishes that the protest song is not merely the preserve of singer-songwriters; it is a mode of political communication that has been used to confront many systems of oppression across its many genres, from street ballads to art song, grime to hymns, and music hall to punk. Our Subversive Voice traces the history of the protest song, examines its rhetorical forms, and explores the conditions of its genesis. It recounts how these songs have addressed discrimination and inequality, exploitation and the environment, and immigration and identity, and how institutions and organizations have sought both to facilitate and to suppress them. Drawing on a large and diverse corpus of songwriters, this book argues that song does more than accompany protest: it choreographs and communicates it.


The protest song, Our Subversive Voice shows, is an enduring, affecting, and effective means of expression and an essential element in understanding the drive to create political change, in the past and for the future.



?Our Subversive Voice is a model of cross-disciplinary conceptualization, treating politics as cultural activity and music-making as political activity. Covering a broad sweep in time period and musical genres, it is a fascinating and wonderfully fruitful contribution.? Simon Frith, University of Edinburgh and co-author of The History of Live Music in Britain