Macau and Catholic Sacred Music Across the Sino-Western Divide

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Age of Discovery
Aureo Castro
Category=AVA
Category=AVLK
Category=JBSL
Catholic sacred music
Catholicism in Asia
Church of St. Paul
College of St. Paul
Doming Lam
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eq_music
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
global music history
Guangdong
Jesuits in Asia
Macau
missionaries in Asia
multilingualism
music and colonialism
music and mobility
music and post-colonialism
Seminary of St. Joseph
Sino-Western exchange
SinocentrismPortuguese overseas empire

Product details

  • ISBN 9780472058013
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: The University of Michigan Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For three centuries, the former Portuguese colony of Macau served as the gateway into mainland China and the locale for the development of an Asian Catholic culture that encompassed distinctive musical practices and styles. Macau and Catholic Music Across the Sino-Western Divide draws extensively upon historical documents in Chinese and Portuguese for a polylingual approach to Catholic sacred music. Jen-yen Chen follows this music from the sixteenth century through the twentieth by reading literary accounts of sound, primary source documents, and musical notation to examine the impacts of linguistic, political, and cultural divides and the ways sounds have traveled across these divides. Chen covers Chinese responses to Western sounds in Macau and southern China, illuminating the strategies for the use of sounds and musicking adopted by Jesuit missionaries; and the complexities of identity formation negotiated by Macau Catholics who confront exceptionalist historical discourses of Chinese or Portuguese “greatness.”

Drawing from sound studies and musicological methods, Chen argues that Chinese descriptions of Catholic sounds in Macau, including the ringing of church bells, the playing of the organ, and choral singing, illuminate spatial, sonic, and ideological mobilities that reconfigure Chinese and European identities. Macau and Catholic Music Across the Sino-Western Divide also extends to contemporary times to explore how present day members of Macau’s Catholic community position themselves in relation to the historical narratives often told about their city, cultivating a rich individuality of identity that refuses conformity to fixed notions of Asianness or Westernness.

Jen-yen Chen is Professor of Musicology at National Taiwan University.