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- Title
MUSIC AND THE SIN OF SLOTH: THE GENDERED ARTICULATION OF WORTHY MUSICAL TIME IN EARLY AMERICAN MUSIC.
- Authors
SHORNER-JOHNSON, KEVIN
- Abstract
Sociologist Max Weber identified Puritan constructions of virtuous time and the sin of sloth as having explanatory power for the origins of Puritan action and capitalist economies. This article expands upon Weber's thesis to examine how the sin of sloth was reinterpreted to encourage or prohibit psalm singing, singing schools, and later forms of musicking. In particular, the article examines how the sin of sloth has always been a complex construction of virtue, emotion, time, and gender. An examination of musicking through the sin of sloth illuminates the impact of virtue ethics, gender, and time. Arguments for and against musicking are often grounded in notions of virtuous time, gender, emotion, and imagined depravity.
- Subjects
WEBER, Max, 1864-1920; TEMPO (Music theory); EARLY music; LAZINESS; SIN; VIRTUE ethics
- Publication
Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2019, Vol 27, Issue 1, p51
- ISSN
1063-5734
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2979/philmusieducrevi.27.1.05