Amazing Grace at 250

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Aesthetics
Amazing Grace
Black theology
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Category=NH
Category=QRAX
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Christian hymnology
Civil rights
Commemoration
Community
Congregation
congregational singing studies
cultural adaptation of hymns
Devotional
Dissemination
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eq_history
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Global
Gospel
Heritage
History
Hymn
hymn performance in global contexts
Hymnody
Imagery
John Newton
Legacies
Lyric
Melody
Music
Musicology
musicology of worship
Performance
Poetics
Poetry
Recording
Religion
Religious
Scripture
Slavery
Song
theological literary analysis
Theology
transatlantic religious history
Tune
Worship

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032763316
  • Weight: 730g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book focuses on arguably the best-known Christian hymn worldwide. From the slave trade to the civil rights movement and from obscurity in its country of origin to global recognition, the origins, history, influence, and legacy of “Amazing Grace” are uniquely complex. The volume brings together historians, theologians, literary scholars, and musicologists to shed new light on the ways in which the hymn’s lyrics, familiar musical setting and its performance by leading vocalists contribute to its enduring popularity and the meanings and value ascribed to it by diverse communities across time and place. The chapters explore the literary and religious qualities of the text, its relationship with the ubiquitous NEW BRITAIN melody, its adoption and adaptation by famous singers and in Christian churches from South America to Asia. The contributors highlight significant facets of the hymn’s origins and legacy, while the collection as a whole provides a focused emphasis on the importance of historical, literary, theological, and musical approaches in understanding the ways in which Christian congregational music acquires meaning and influences thought and practice in local and global contexts.

Martin V. Clarke is Senior Lecturer in Music at The Open University, UK.

Gareth Atkins is Fellow, Tutor, and Director of Studies in History at Queens’ College, University of Cambridge, UK.