1- Becoming Peace? Revisiting the Legacy of Protest Music Performances through the Lens of Local Peacebuilding - Lauren Michelle Levesque, Saint Paul University
Quand:
1:30 PM, Samedi 25 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Pauses:
Pause café 03:30 PM à 04:00 PM (30 minutes)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-R520
Comment:
This paper explores
the conceptual implications of understanding protest music performances as
sites of ‘peace’ in Canadian urban contexts. Using research on music in
peacebuilding (Sandoval 2016) and the spatial dimensions of peace (Bjorkdahl
and Kappler 2018) as starting points, I ask: Can protest music performances provide
insight into building local cultures of peace in Canadian urban contexts? This question
aims to problematize the legacy of protest music performances as privileged
spaces of social and political dissent in narratives of constructive social
change (Robertson 2015). The role of musical performances in shaping progressive
social movements is not new (Freidman 2016); however, I argue that analyzing these
performances through scholarship on peacebuilding opens up reflections on
protest music as an emergent, creative process that leverages the possibilities
for imagination and action in local, urban communities. Addressing these
possibilities can craft new narratives that expand theoretical engagements with
popular music as social and political dissent and protest music performances as
important vehicles for imagining and enacting grassroots modalities of peace. Such
theoretical engagements include considering the unexpected ways popular music
studies can contribute to advancing knowledge on local cultures of peace in
Canada and peacebuilding itself as an emergent, creative process.