
Music and Religion
Jeffers Engelhardt(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 22. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
160 pages
978-0-19-069915-4 (ISBN)
Description
Why do we disentangle music and religion? How are music and religion entangled in the worlds of practitioners and scholars? What can ethnomusicologists offer to all students of religion by attending to religion's audibility or inaudibility? In this book, author Jeffers Engelhardt engages generations-old interdisciplinary debates to highlight scholars' changing relationships with other-than-human beings in the religious worlds they study.
In the history of ethnomusicology, there is a degree of discomfort with other-than-human agency and theologically grounded methods. However, in recent years, ethnomusicologists have recognized the limits of secular models that favor sonic data over divine knowledge. This moment is marked by a resurgence of sacred musicologies that predate ethnomusicology as a field and by ethnomusicologists' commitments to decolonizing the discipline. The resulting scholarship incorporates both secular, cultural approaches and non-secular, entangled approaches to the study of music and religion. Music and Religion critically examines how scholars navigate these approaches to sound and other-than-human agency. Engelhardt provides ethnographic case studies and surveys key texts from the eighteenth century to the present day to address questions that have occupied scholars for generations. In doing so, he invites readers to embrace new ways of thinking about and listening to the world around them.
In the history of ethnomusicology, there is a degree of discomfort with other-than-human agency and theologically grounded methods. However, in recent years, ethnomusicologists have recognized the limits of secular models that favor sonic data over divine knowledge. This moment is marked by a resurgence of sacred musicologies that predate ethnomusicology as a field and by ethnomusicologists' commitments to decolonizing the discipline. The resulting scholarship incorporates both secular, cultural approaches and non-secular, entangled approaches to the study of music and religion. Music and Religion critically examines how scholars navigate these approaches to sound and other-than-human agency. Engelhardt provides ethnographic case studies and surveys key texts from the eighteenth century to the present day to address questions that have occupied scholars for generations. In doing so, he invites readers to embrace new ways of thinking about and listening to the world around them.
Reviews / Votes
A passionate argument for treating ethnomusicology as a spiritual discipline that can attune us to other ways of being. * Tanya Lurhmann, Stanford University* What a joy it is to read this book. Engaging with ethnomusicological texts old and new, while firmly recognizing the diversity of the world's religions and their approaches to sound, Music and Religion will surely be a landmark text in ethnomusicology, not just in the study of 'music and religion.' * Jim Sykes, University of Pennsylvania
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More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 209 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 10 mm
Weight
204 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-069915-4 (9780190699154)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Jeffers Engelhardt
Music and Religion
Book
05/2026
Oxford University Press Inc
€116.50
Shipment within 15-20 days
Person
Jeffers Engelhardt is the Karen and Brian Conway '80, P'18 Presidential Teaching Professor of Music at Amherst College, where he is affiliated with Film and Media Studies, European Studies, and the Five College Certificate in Ethnomusicology. He is the author of Singing the Right Way (2015), and the co-editor of Baltic Musics Beyond the Post-Soviet (2024), Arvo Paert: Sounding the Sacred (2021), Studying Congregational Music (2021), and Resounding Transcendence (2016). Since 2016, he has served as Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Journal of Music and Religion.
Author
Karen and Brian Conway Presidential Teaching Professor of MusicKaren and Brian Conway Presidential Teaching Professor of Music, Amherst College
Content
- Acknowledgements
- List of Figures
- Prologue: Ethnomusicology, Secularity, Agency
- Introduction: Religion's Audibility
- Chapter 1: Disentangling Religion
- Chapter 2: Entangling Religion
- Conclusion: Religion's Inaudibility
- Bibliography
- Index