America's Heirloom Comfort Song: "Amazing Grace"
Issue: Vol 16 No. 3 (2013)
Journal: Implicit Religion
Subject Areas: Religious Studies
DOI: 10.1558/imre.v16i3.277-288
Abstract:
An historical, sociological, theological, cultural inquiry into the popularity of Newton’s hymn across the racial (and class) lines that divide North Americans. This “heirloom,” this “cultural icon,” functions widely and continually, primarily as a “comfort song” (like “comfort” food). The religious and non-religious alike return again and again to (the first three stanzas of) “America’s most beloved song”: a staple of funerals, preserved in over a thousand recordings, most of them in the “popular” realm. This article explores the continuing nature of its long-proven appeal to a diverse breadth of Americans, in increasingly secularized times. The article notes, however, its apparent failure to energize reconciliation of the black and white races, both of which remain deeply devoted to it.
Author: Kevin Lewis
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