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(Ebook) Singing for Freedom: The Hutchinson Family Singers and the Nineteenth-Century Culture of Reform by Gac, Scott ISBN 9780300111989, 0300111983

  • SKU: EBN-36423050
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Instant download (eBook) Singing for Freedom: The Hutchinson Family Singers and the Nineteenth-Century Culture of Reform after payment.
Authors:Gac, Scott
Pages:328 pages.
Year:2007
Editon:Illustrated
Publisher:Yale University Press
Language:english
File Size:3.11 MB
Format:pdf
ISBNS:9780300111989, 0300111983
Categories: Ebooks

Product desciption

(Ebook) Singing for Freedom: The Hutchinson Family Singers and the Nineteenth-Century Culture of Reform by Gac, Scott ISBN 9780300111989, 0300111983

In the two decades prior to the Civil War, the Hutchinson Family Singers of New Hampshire became America’s most popular musical act. Out of a Baptist revival upbringing, John, Asa, Judson, and Abby Hutchinson transformed themselves in the 1840s into national icons, taking up the reform issues of their age and singing out especially for temperance and antislavery reform. This engaging book is the first to tell the full story of the Hutchinsons, how they contributed to the transformation of American culture, and how they originated the marketable American protest song. Through concerts, writings, sheet music publications, and books of lyrics, the Hutchinson Family Singers established a new space for civic action, a place at the intersection of culture, reform, religion, and politics. The book documents the Hutchinsons’ impact on abolition and other reform projects and offers an original conception of the rising importance of popular culture in antebellum America.
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