In the 1960s, Jewish music in America began to evolve. Traditional
liturgical tunes developed into a blend of secular and sacred sound
that became known in the 1980s as “American Nusach.” Chief among
these developments was the growth of feminist Jewish songwriting. In
this lively study, Sarah M. Ross brings together scholarship on Jewish
liturgy, U.S. history, and musical ethnology to describe the multiple
roots and development of feminist Jewish music in the last quarter of
the twentieth century. Focusing on the work of prolific songwriters
such as Debbie Friedman, Rabbi Geela Rayzel Raphael, Rabbi Hanna
Tiferet Siegel, and Linda Hirschhorn, this volume illuminates the
biographies and oeuvres of innovators in the field, and shows how this
new musical form arose from the rich contexts of feminism, identity
politics, folk music, and Judaism. In addition to providing deep
content analysis of individual songs, Ross examines the feminist
Jewish music scene across the United States, the reception of this
music, challenges to disseminating the music beyond informal settings,
and the state of Jewish music publishing. Rounding out the picture of
the transformation of Jewish music, the volume contains appendixes of
songs and songwriters a selection of musical transcriptions of
feminist Jewish songs, and a comprehensive discography. This book will
interest scholars and students in the fields of American Jewish
history, women’s studies, feminism, ethnomusicology, and
contemporary popular and folk music.
Les mer
Creating Feminist Jewish Music in the United States
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781611689617
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Brandeis University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter