

An edition of Why Catholics Can't Sing (1990)
The culture of Catholicism and the triumph of bad taste
By Thomas Day
Publish Date
1990
Publisher
Crossroad
Language
eng
Pages
183
Description:
This book is about the culture of American Christianity and what it does to our understanding of God, self, and community as reflected in the way Christians worship. “[Thomas] Day, head of the music department at Salve Regina College in Rhode Island, accurately and wittily skewers what passes for culture in American Catholicism, particularly as expressed in church music. He takes aim at the ‘Irish-American’ repertoire of songs that comprise Catholic music in this country, and assails other less felicitous liturgical practices in vogue since Vatican II, such as applauding during Mass. ‘Liturgical post-modernism,’ according to Day, has resulted in noisy and forced participation from the laity, and encourages a church-wide narcissism that is a serious threat to individuals as well as the institution. No mere nay-sayer, Day makes positive suggestions for nurturing the latent vitality he perceives in the American Catholic community. This is an informative, insightful and entertaining critique.” —Publishers Weekly.
subjects: Catholics, Social life and customs, Popular culture, Religious life, Attitudes, Church history, Church music, Catholic Church, History, Mœurs et coutumes, Histoire religieuse, Musique d'église, Catholiques, Culture populaire, Histoire, Vie religieuse, Église catholique, Catholics, united states, Church music, catholic church, Music, religious aspects, christianity
Places: United States
Times: 1965-, 20th century