Abstract
This article discusses a case study focusing on the appropriation of psalms in choral festival ‘150 Psalms’. The authors observe a complex relationship between the festival, in which the psalms are appropriated as heritage, and attitudes regarding the religious traditions in which the psalms are rooted. Authenticity, a key concept in the field of heritage and cultural memory studies, is an important quality of the appropriation, however, this authenticity appeared to be constructed in a diverse range of ways. Participants in the festival make different, competing claims regarding (in)authenticity, relating to ‘beauty’, ‘humanness’, ‘religiousness’, ‘relationship with God(s)’, political relevance’ and ‘ambiguity’. Discussing how these authenticities work in different individuals’ appropriation, the authors show that an authenticity built upon values of ‘human universality’, promoted by the festival organization, seems to have replaced an authenticity built upon ‘religiousness’, which the organizers assign to the realm of non-universal, individual experience. By signaling this tension, the authors also conclude that ‘authenticity’ is a notion far more complex than extant theories on processes of collective ‘canonization’ suggest.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Contemporary Religion |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - Aug 2020 |
Keywords
- (choral) music
- cultural festival
- secularization
- political engagement
- heritage studies