Playing for Change Music Festivals as Community Learning and Development

Playing for Change Music Festivals as Community Learning and Development by Michael B. MacDonald, published by Peter Lang Publishing, Incorporated in 2016, explores the intersection of music, community, and education. This edition, written in English and spanning 163 pages, introduces a critical pedagogy of arts-based community learning and development (A-CLD). The author challenges conventional views on development, arguing for a model that prioritizes individual and collective autonomy over traditional state-driven approaches.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of how music festivals can serve as platforms for social justice and community engagement. The book presents A-CLD as a framework that fosters cultural resistance against neoliberalism, emphasizing the importance of creating experimental assemblages in the arts. Through a four-year study of thirteen music festivals, MacDonald provides insights into the role of cultural workers and offers a new vocabulary for understanding cultural production. This work contributes to discussions in fields such as education, social development, and the philosophy of music, making it a significant resource for those interested in the social aspects of arts and community development.
Official synopsis Publisher
Playing for Change – performing for money and for social justice – introduces a critical pedagogy of arts-based community learning and development (A-CLD), a new discipline wherein artists learn to become educators, social workers, and community economic development agents. Challenging the assumption that acculturation into a ruling ideology of state development is necessary, this book presents a version of CLD that locates development in the production of subjectivities. The author argues that A-CLD is as concerned with the autonomous collective and the individual as it is with establishing community infrastructure. As a result, a radical new theory is proposed to explain aesthetics within arts movements, beginning not by normalizing music cultures within global capitalism, but by identifying the creation of experimental assemblages as locations of cultural resistance. This book offers a new vocabulary of cultural production to provide a critical language for a theory of anti-capitalist subjectivity and for a new type of cultural worker involved with A-CLD. Drawing from a four-year study of thirteen music festivals, Playing for Change forwards A-CLD as a locally situated, joyful, and creative resistance to the globalizing forces of neoliberalism.
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