Wednesday, June 4, 2014

CFP Essays on Rock and Religion (9/15/14)

CALL FOR ABSTRACTS: Essays on Rock and Religion
full name / name of organization:
Robert P. McParland, PhD., Alex DiBlasi, M.A.
contact email:
mcparlandr@felician.edu; alexcharlesdiblasi@gmail.com
Call for Proposals: Saints, Sinners, and Seekers: A Collection of Essays on Rock and Religion

PROPOSAL DEADLINE: September 15, 2014

The aim of this book is to explore the relationship between religion/spirituality and rock music. Much has been written on the history of religious music itself, but not much exists on the role religion and spirituality have played in popular song. Music itself has long been considered a spiritual and even meditative practice; this book seeks to investigate rock music as an expression of religious inquiry, religious devotion, and even as a religious experience itself. From the rise of the American Evangelical movement to the widespread introduction of Eastern philosophies in the West, the past century has seen a radical change in the religious makeup of Western culture. Rock artists across the world have incorporated both new and old religious beliefs into their work, and it is our aim to take a similarly ecumenical approach with the essays in this book, covering a wide range of philosophies and belief systems. Scholars from a variety of backgrounds – music, religious studies, cultural studies, anthropology – are encouraged to submit for this volume.

Contributors are encouraged to consider addressing any number of the following in their submissions:

Comparative Religion/World Religions
The appearance of religion or spirituality in the work of major rock artists and their spiritual journeys – conversion, life changes, etc.
Wonder and a sense of the Divine
Seeking transcendence
Relationships between music/rock music and religion (i.e., the “God Rock” movement of the 1970’s, the Hare Krishna movement, etc.)
Heavy Metal and organized religion
Seeking and spiritual exploration
Millenialism, Apocalypticism
The Quiet, Meditation, Contemplation and Music
Mythology
Mystery
Salvation
Values of Respect, Diversity, Charity, Love, Compassion, Hope, Faith, Justice, Wisdom, Kindness, Care
Parables
Community
Prayer
Prophecy
The Afterlife (Heaven and Hell, Reincarnation)
Celebration
Ecstasy
Rock and Ritual
Charism
Rock drawing upon black Gospel spirituals
Psalms
Peace/Shanti/Shalom
Rock Music and Religious Dialogue
Theodicy (that is, explaining suffering under a good God)
Soul
Karma
Musical Pilgrimages (Liverpool, Memphis/Graceland, Haight-Ashbury)
The Divine/Holy Spirit/Great Spirit
Angels/Angelic visions
Atonement
Haggadah: religious storytelling
Songs that quote religious scripture (the Bible, the Tao, Bhagavad Gita, Koran, etc.)
Lamentations (songs for a broken world, modern chants of misery like those in the Hebrew Bible)
Miracles

A few parameters:

• The plan is for this book to principally address the relationship between rock and religion. We ask that subjects be explicitly tied to rock music.
• It is the aim of both editors to include essays addressing all major world religions.
• As such, we also ask that potential contributors write as objectively as possible, avoiding dogmatic statements, agendas, or arguments with specific religious paths.

Essays can run anywhere from 3,500 to 5,000 words. Contributors should use MLA format. Avoid using quotes from song lyrics. Figures, photos, and illustrations are not recommended unless you can provide a high-resolution image for which the rights have also been cleared.

Please submit a 200-word abstract as a Word file (either .doc or .docx) by September 15, 2014, along with a current CV.

Any further questions, please feel free to contact either of the editors of this book:

Robert P. McParland, PhD.
Felician College
mcparlandr@felician.edu

Alex C. DiBlasi, MA
Independent Scholar
alexcharlesdiblasi@gmail.com


By web submission at 06/01/2014 - 19:56

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