Music/IAFS Faculty Talk on What Music Says About The Future Of White Nationalism
What Does Music Say About The Future Of White Nationalism?
Source: CPR News,ÌýColorado Matters
Original article
Sam Brasch, August 18, 2017
Like other political movements, white nationalism has shifted over time.Ìý, an assistant professor of ethnomusicology at the University of Colorado Boulder, has been spent much of his career tracking those changes by following the cultural expressions of white nationalists--their music in particular.Ìý
He claims to have heard a moderation in the movement. AggressiveÌýÌýdominated in the 1990s. Over the last few decades, the soundtrackÌýshifted towardÌý
At the same time, leaders in EuropeÌýtried to take white nationalism intoÌýthe political mainstream. Swedish anti-immigrant leader Daniel Friberg traded in his skinhead style for a suit and sunglasses. The buttoned-down image helped himÌýsell his ideology as just another political alternative.Ìý
That's why TeitelbaumÌýnoted Friberg's attendance at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville. InÌý, TeitelbaumÌýwrote that white nationalists have moved from "accommodating critics toÌýignoring them." Going forward, he told Colorado Matters, activists may become more open about their political views. They could also embrace the antagonisticÌýtactics of the so-called alt-right.Ìý