[Description of] Music as Ethics: Stories from Virginia
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Description
Music as Ethics offers a comparative ethnography of the relationship of music to ethics in four communities in Virginia, covering a wide range of demographic contexts and musical repertoires. Holy Cross Monastery in Berryville is a small community of fifteen Trappist monks who follow the rule of St. Benedict, composed in the early sixth century. Twin Oaks in Louisa is a ninety-member intentional community, founded in 1967, dedicated to egalitarianism. The "Sanctuary" in the Richmond city jail is a community of approximately forty residents drawn from two of the facility's dorms. Richmond is the state capital, with a fraught history of racial inequality. To say that we can experience music "as" ethics means that we can hold several, culturally informed attitudes about music's ethical meanings and functions. While music's relationship to ethical life differs between each community, the case studies suggest that we can all grow as ethical individuals and communities if we pay close attention to music's ethical potential. But as long as our experience of music as ethics remains implicit and vague, we miss an opportunity to fully realize its ethical affordances. More than that, we also expose ourselves to manipulation by those who would wield music (and other "affective" means) for their own social agenda.
ISBN
9780197654880
Publication Date
5-30-2023
Publisher
Oxford University Press
City
Oxford
Keywords
Music, Ethnomusicology, Ethics in Music, Musical Structures Styles & Techniques, Popular Music
School
School of Arts and Sciences
Department
Music: General
Disciplines
Ethnomusicology | Music
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https://richmond.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01URICH_INST/1mlbmsr/cdi_askewsholts_vlebooks_9780197654903
Recommended Citation
McGraw, A. C. (2023). Music as ethics: Stories from Virginia. Oxford University Press.