The Resounding Revolution: Freedom Song after 1968

Stephen Stacks
University of Illinois Press

Far from being bounded by the timeframe of the 1960s, freedom song continues to evolve as a tool both of historical memory and of present activism. Stephen Stacks looks at how post-1968 freedom song helps us negotiate our present relationship to the era while at the same time sustaining the contemporary struggle inspired by it. Stacks’s analysis shifts the focus of attention from genre--freedom song--to process and practice--freedom singing. As he shows, freedom singing after 1968 generates multilayered meanings. It can reinforce, or resist, consensus memories or dominant narratives.

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"My Name Is Not Tom": The Life of the Reverend Josiah Henson

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Call and Response: 10 Leadership Lessons from the Black Church