No Other Name? Authenticity, Authority, and Anointing in Christian Popular Music

Resource added
How to Cite: Wagner, T. (2015). No Other Name? Authenticity, Authority, and Anointing in Christian Popular Music. Journal of World Popular Music, 1(2), 324–342. https://doi.org/10.1558/jwpm.v1i2.23949

Full description

This article investigates the role that celebrity plays in a Christian culture industry where authenticity and identity are always understood in relation to spiritual authority. In evangelical Christian (sub)culture, discourses of intention frame musical practice and arise from a historical Protestant emphasis on individual authority that is expressed in a highly-mediated consumer culture in which celebrity is a resource for identity and lifestyle. These discourses are reflexively activated through the evangelical concept of anointing, which fuses individual and institutional authority with spiritual authority. Exploring the ways in which this unfolds offers interesting ways for scholars of popular music to think about the relationship of popular music, celebrity and the culture industries in a variety of other contexts.

  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpeg
  • file size
    106 KB
  • container title
    Journal of World Popular Music
  • creator
    Tom Wagner
  • issn
    ISSN 2052-4919 (online)
  • issue
    1.2
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • doi