Stories of Songs, Choral Activism and LGBTQ+ Rights in Europe

T. Hilder
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Abstract

This paper attends to choral activism and LGBTQ+ rights in Europe. Drawing on models in a post-Stonewall US context, LGBTQ+ choirs have appeared since 1982 in urban centres throughout Europe, employing a range of repertoire, adopting innovative performance practices, and enacting public interventions. These choirs can affirm positive LGBTQ+ identities, create safer spaces, build local LGBTQ+ communities, offer sites of healing and sharing about different LGBTQ+ experiences, and increase visibility in the aid of LGBTQ+ rights (Balén 2017; De Quadros 2019; MacLachlan 2020). While LGBTQ+ rights may have  become “a powerful symbol of Europe” (Ayoub and Paternotte 2014: 3) in the popular imagination and in the EU public discourse, in the last decade, new nationalist formations, increased violence toward LGBTQ+ people, and divisions within an apparent LGBTQ+ community have rendered queer Europeans at a critical juncture just as the project of Europe itself begins to crumble. As an activist within, and researcher of a European LGBTQ+ choral music scene, I will share with this paper stories of songs, choirs, festivals and choral networks inspired by Rita Felski’s notion of “hooked” (2020). Drawing on several years of ethnographic research in the UK, Italy and Poland, I ask: How have LGBTQ+ choirs shaped and been shaped by the struggle for LGBTQ+ rights locally, nationally and transnationally? What stories do these choirs tell us about the power of songs to bring about wider social transformation? How might LGBTQ+ choirs offer models of care, community and advocacy in a continent in crisis? Discussing an array of issues and cases – the Various Voices festival, the London Gay Men’s Chorus and the Cromatica network – and the potentials of applied methods, I invite us to listen to LGBTQ+ choral singing as a form of activism that continues to transform European 21st century politics and society.
歌曲的故事,合唱活动和LGBTQ+权利在欧洲
本文关注欧洲的合唱行动主义和LGBTQ+权利。自1982年以来,LGBTQ+合唱团在整个欧洲的城市中心出现,采用了一系列的曲目,采用了创新的表演实践,并实施了公共干预。这些合唱团可以肯定积极的LGBTQ+身份,创造更安全的空间,建立当地的LGBTQ+社区,提供治疗和分享不同LGBTQ+经历的场所,并在LGBTQ+权利的帮助下提高知名度(bal 2017;De Quadros 2019;预告2020)。虽然LGBTQ+权利在大众想象和欧盟公共话语中可能已经成为“欧洲的一个强大象征”(Ayoub和Paternotte 2014: 3),但在过去十年中,新的民族主义形成,对LGBTQ+人群的暴力增加,以及一个明显的LGBTQ+社区内部的分裂,使得欧洲酷儿处于一个关键的关头,就像欧洲项目本身开始崩溃一样。作为欧洲LGBTQ+合唱音乐场景的活动家和研究者,我将与本文分享受丽塔·费尔斯基(Rita Felski)“上瘾”(2020)概念启发的歌曲、合唱团、节日和合唱网络的故事。在英国、意大利和波兰进行了数年的人种学研究后,我提出了这样一个问题:LGBTQ+合唱团是如何在地方、国家和跨国的LGBTQ+权利斗争中塑造和被塑造的?这些唱诗班告诉我们,歌曲的力量能带来更广泛的社会变革。LGBTQ+合唱团如何在危机中的非洲大陆提供关怀、社区和倡导的模式?通过讨论一系列议题和案例——各种声音音乐节、伦敦男同性恋合唱团和克罗马蒂卡网络——以及应用方法的潜力,我邀请大家聆听LGBTQ+合唱作为一种继续改变21世纪欧洲政治和社会的行动主义形式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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