Knowledge Exchange - Campus Research Day: The Sound of the Civil War: Examining the Intersection of Music and Emotion
 

Presenter Information

Christina CannonFollow

Presentation Type

Oral Presentation

Mentor/Supervising Professor Name

Diller, Lisa

Mentor/Supervising Professor Email Address

ldiller@southern.edu

Presentation Location

On Campus

Description

The topics of the history of music and the history of music intersect in the Civil War in fascinating ways. Both religious music and “secular” music were seen to have great power over their listeners, potentially with the power to alter the directions of lives or their salvation status. Music was used both as a mode of rebellion against the antagonizing army and ideal and a rebellion against unnecessarily violent acts. Each side used it against the other, but a select few also used it against the war itself. Soldiers marched to music, set camp to music, and fought to music; civilians likewise used it to express their grief and patriotism, their emotional ties to the fighting and opposition. The Civil War, in a very real sense, had a soundtrack.

Presenter Phone Number

(720) 737-6746

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The Sound of the Civil War: Examining the Intersection of Music and Emotion

On Campus

The topics of the history of music and the history of music intersect in the Civil War in fascinating ways. Both religious music and “secular” music were seen to have great power over their listeners, potentially with the power to alter the directions of lives or their salvation status. Music was used both as a mode of rebellion against the antagonizing army and ideal and a rebellion against unnecessarily violent acts. Each side used it against the other, but a select few also used it against the war itself. Soldiers marched to music, set camp to music, and fought to music; civilians likewise used it to express their grief and patriotism, their emotional ties to the fighting and opposition. The Civil War, in a very real sense, had a soundtrack.