Work Type
Article
Publication Date
2023
Department
Africana Studies
Abstract
Hymns, whether composed for religious contexts or as expressions of spiritual reflection, are historically revered for their redemptive nature. For generations, Black Hymnody has cried out for Christological interventions to end shambolic and systemic oppression against Black people. The vicious murder of George Perry Floyd, Jr. on May 25, 2020 reverberated and initiated, as a catalyst, an overdue global awakening that sparked a catalytic moment for conversations too long deferred. Conversations that question how we experience and name things; how we negotiate trauma; and how we engage one another as neighbors. In many ways, the redemptive nature of hymns has been used in non-redemptive, and perhaps even oppressive ways over the many years. Inspired by the prophetic hope of hymnist, Rev. Charles Albert Tindley (1851-1933), this article will offer a reflective gaze on the intersection of hymnology and the study of race while offering an invitation to expanded ways of holding space for that which has been too long ignored. Issues of agency, mobility and de/coloniality will be explored with an eye towards equity, inclusivity and redemption, not solely in the communal singing of select hymns but also their canonization. Further conversation will be focused on how hymns, sung in congregations, become a form of community expression beyond the Church. Finally, this article will offer insights and hopes for how scholars approach the study of race within their analytical research and interpretative scholarship on hymns.
Recommended Citation
Price, Emmett G. III, "(Special Section, Hymns Beyond the Congregation II): “We’ll Understand it Better By and By:” Nomenclature, Negotiation, and Naming our Neighbors" (2023). Faculty Works.
https://remix.berklee.edu/faculty-works/75
Comments
This article was published in Volume 9, No. 1 of the Yale Journal of Music & Religion under a CC BY license.