Music, Power, and Politics presents sixteen different cultural perspectives on the concept of music as a site of socio-political struggle. Essays by scholars from around the world explore the means by which music's long-acknowledged potential to persuade, seduce, indoctrinate, rouse, incite, or even silence listeners, has been used to advance agendas of power and protest. The essays included examine: music used to convey political ideology in Nazi Germany, apartheid-era South Africa, and modern-day North Korea postcolonial musical efforts to reclaim ethnic heritage in Serbia and the Caribbean music as a means of establishing new cultural identities for recently empowered social groups in the UK and Brazil the subversion of racial stereotypes through popular music in the USA music as a tool of popular resistance to oppressive government policies in modern day Iran and the Bolivian AndesINTRODUCTION Annie J. Randall CHAPTER 1 A Censorship of Forgetting: Origins and Origin Myths of Battle Hymn of the Republic Annie J. Randall CHAPTER 2 Discipline and Choralism: The Birth of Musical Colonialism Grant Olwage CHAPTER 3 Power Needs Names: Hegemony, Folklorization, and the Viejitos Dance of Michoac?n, Mexico Ruth Hellier-Tinoco CHAPTER 4 The Power to Influence Minds: German Folk Music During the Nazi Era and After Britta Sweers CHAPTER 5 The Making of a National Musical Icon: Xian Xinghai and his Yellow River Cantata Hon-Lun Yang CHAPTER 6 Dancing for the Eternal President Keith Howard CHAPTER 7 Despu?s de 500 A?os [After 500 Years]: The Role of Saya in Bolivia's Black Cultural Movement Robert W. Templeman CHAPTER 8 The Power of Recently Revitalized Serbian Rural Folk Music in Urban Settings Jelena Jovanovic CHAPTER 9 Hands off my instrument! Helen Reddington CHAPTER 10 Barbadian Tukl“}