Music Writ Large

The Potential of Music in Peacebuilding

Music Writ Large: The Potential of Music in Peacebuilding
"In the face of dehumanizing conflict, sonic experience can create the spaces to feel beauty within and around us, a process of re-humanization ultimately necessary in processes of rebuilding flourishing communities."

Lederach argues that it is astounding that so little attention has been paid to music in the formal literature of peacebuilding. Poetic insights about the qualities of music are matched by more theoretical reflections on music’s potential to contribute to building peace in unexpected ways. Lederach’s chapter resonates with and builds upon his earlier 2010 work, When Blood and Bones Cry Out, which was written with his daughter, Angela Jill Lederach. Lederach explores how music writ large “evokes, provokes, and invokes.” He suggests that when approaching music and peacebuilding, we must enter through the doorway of soundscape, recognizing how music can evoke depth of meaning, provoke active responses and invoke engagements with and journeys through the past, present and future toward peace.

Lederach, John Paul. “Music Writ Large: The Potential of Music in Peacebuilding.” In Peacebuilding and the Arts, edited by Mitchell Jolyon, Giselle Vincett, Theodora Hawksley, and Hal Culbertson, 139–56. Rethinking Peace and Conflict Studies. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, an imprint of Springer Nature Switzerland AG, 2019.

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