This article investigates the role of music in presidential election campaigns and political movements inspired by theoretical arguments in Henri Lefebvre’s Rhythmanalysis, John Dewey ́s pragmatist rethinking of aesthetics and existing scholarship on the politics of music. Specifically, it explores how musical rhythms and melodies enable new forms of political awareness, participation, and critique in an increasingly polarized Brazil through an ethnomusicological exploration of how left-wing and right-wing movements used music to disseminate politics during the 2018 election that culminated in the presidency of Jair Messias Bolsonaro. Three lessons can be learned. First, in Brazil, music breathes life, energy, and affective engagement ...
peer reviewedThis article seeks to examine the relevance of popular culture and music in particular ...
Los movimientos y la resistencia observados en el marco político brasileño desde 1985, después ...
Music, the Non-Governmental Actor Changing Political Policy: Have We Failed the Power of Music? Peop...
This article investigates the role of music in presidential election campaigns and political movemen...
Inspired by Karen Barad’s theoretical developments within the field of “posthumanist performativity”...
Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine Abstract This article discusses the importance of...
In Brazil, music and citizenship have long gone hand in hand. Based upon fieldwork in Salvador, Bahi...
Cet article propose d’examiner la pertinence politique des arts populaires, en général, et de la mus...
This dissertation investigates how music making shapes political participation during periods of dem...
Taking as its focal point the Mexican national elections of 2018, this article explores how music, o...
In this article I argue that considering how any sort of music is made more closely - as sonic mater...
In 1964, Brazil suffered a military coup that established a dictatorship in the country until 1985. ...
This article presents a cultural history of Brazilian popular song (canção popular) and the many mus...
This event aims to innovatively question how musical practices formed ways of imagining democracy in...
Campaign song created as part of Mexico’s 2018 national election, usually circulated as part of musi...
peer reviewedThis article seeks to examine the relevance of popular culture and music in particular ...
Los movimientos y la resistencia observados en el marco político brasileño desde 1985, después ...
Music, the Non-Governmental Actor Changing Political Policy: Have We Failed the Power of Music? Peop...
This article investigates the role of music in presidential election campaigns and political movemen...
Inspired by Karen Barad’s theoretical developments within the field of “posthumanist performativity”...
Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine Abstract This article discusses the importance of...
In Brazil, music and citizenship have long gone hand in hand. Based upon fieldwork in Salvador, Bahi...
Cet article propose d’examiner la pertinence politique des arts populaires, en général, et de la mus...
This dissertation investigates how music making shapes political participation during periods of dem...
Taking as its focal point the Mexican national elections of 2018, this article explores how music, o...
In this article I argue that considering how any sort of music is made more closely - as sonic mater...
In 1964, Brazil suffered a military coup that established a dictatorship in the country until 1985. ...
This article presents a cultural history of Brazilian popular song (canção popular) and the many mus...
This event aims to innovatively question how musical practices formed ways of imagining democracy in...
Campaign song created as part of Mexico’s 2018 national election, usually circulated as part of musi...
peer reviewedThis article seeks to examine the relevance of popular culture and music in particular ...
Los movimientos y la resistencia observados en el marco político brasileño desde 1985, después ...
Music, the Non-Governmental Actor Changing Political Policy: Have We Failed the Power of Music? Peop...