Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/10094
Título
The Dispute for the “People” and Its Songs: A Sonic Battle at the Front and Rearguard during the Spanish Civil War
Publicado en
Music and the Spanish Civil War. p. 25-58
Editorial
Peter Lang
Fecha de publicación
2021
ISBN
9783034331272
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3726/b12904
Zusammenfassung
Music, especially with lyrics, has long accompanied wars, from those fought by the smallest
societies to those of the most complex. One need only look at the multitude of warrior chants,
marches, hymns, singsongs, airs, ditties, and jingles related to warfare that have been
produced throughout time. Many of these songs share a communitarian aim: tying the
soldiers’ or warriors’ social and even personal identities to that of the group or the unit,
fomenting camaraderie as well as heroism and self-sacrifice. The elements most conducive to
such feelings are invoked in the lyrics with references to the patria or homeland; groups of
membership or kinship such as family, lineages, or clans; as well as the common religion, the
countryside; and of course, the great modern monster, the nation.
Materia
Antropología cultural y social
Ethnology
España-Historia
Spain-History
Versión del editor
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