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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Art and Politics

Major touring musicians are presenting work that is essentially protest music, all reacting to the war policies of the Bush Administration. Bruce Springsteen singing Pete Seeger songs, and Neil Young singing war protest are prominent in this regard. At present artists across the board, visual artists, actors, poets, composers, film makers are expressing their objection to Bush policy.

Art and politics is the topic of this quote by historian and activist Howard Zinn.

"I think that art and politics enhance one another. Art is inevitably political - I know that's a big discussion - because it has an effect on the world and it comes out of the world as it is. I think for anybody who's interested in political and social issues, art plays a very special role in enhancing statements that otherwise would be prosaic and dull, in lending passion to something, to facts that need something more than simple statements. Movements have always been given enormous stimulus and inspiration by art and artists. The trade union movement has been helped enormously by music, by labor union songs. The civil rights movement, there's no way of escaping the power, sitting in a church in Selma, of a Selma freedom chorus in building up the courage of black people in Dallas County, knowing that the next day they were going to face state troopers and the sheriff, and the power of song just swept people into a kind of recognition that they could do what they thought they couldn't do." From "The Future of History" by Howard Zinn

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