The Brazilian Hymnological Melting Pot: Investigating Ethnoracial Discourses in the Compilation of the Lutheran Hymnal Livro de Canto (2017)

Author:

Berwig Silva Fernando1

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program in Religious Studies, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75205, USA

Abstract

In 1926, a New York Times article described the cultural and ethnic flows in south Brazil as a “Melting Pot”. The report predicted that German Brazilians, tied to their ethnoracial origin, would soon be Brazilianized. The study of congregational song practices offers insight into the relationship between migration, race, culture, and ethnicity. Moreover, investigating Brazilian Lutheran singing practices helps us understand how the New York Times’ prediction unfolded on the ground. This paper examines the Brazilian Lutheran hymnal Livro de Canto, published in 2017, and displays how Brazil’s ethnoracial diversity is manifested and negotiated in the Lutheran context, both musically and theologically. By interviewing members of the hymnal committee and investigating how they dealt with Brazil’s ethnoraciality in the context of the hymnal compilation, this paper demonstrates ways denominations and churchgoers negotiate theological, cultural, musical, and ethnoracial identities through congregational singing. More importantly, it showcases how Brazilian Lutheran church music practices inform broader social conversations around racism, nationalism, Blackness, and Brazilianness.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference56 articles.

1. Machado, Renato Ferreira, and Adam, Júlio Cézar (2019). Linguagens Litúrgicas e Artísticas Na América Latina: Memória e Identidades, Editora Unilasalle. [1st ed.].

2. Shukla, Sandhya Rajendra, and Tinsman, Heidi (2007). Imagining Our Americas: Toward A Transnational Frame, Duke University Press.

3. Alcoff, Linda Martín (2006). Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and the Self, Oxford University Press. Studies in Feminist Philosophy.

4. Armstrong, Henry E. (New York Times, 1926). Brazil’s Melting Pot, New York Times.

5. Barbosa, José Carlos (2008). Slavery and Protestant Missions in Imperial Brazil: “The Black Does Not Enter the Church, He Peeks in From Outside”, University Press of America.

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