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The Democratic Barometer: Music, Catharsis, and the Contradictions of American War Sentiment
This research examines music as a barometer of American public opinion by comparing the Vietnam War and the post-9/11 era.
The Democratic Barometer: Music, Catharsis, and the Contradictions of American War Sentiment
Mentor: Katie Johnson, Ph.D.
This research examines music as a barometer of American public opinion by comparing the Vietnam War and the post-9/11 era. Drawing on Aristotelian concepts of art as a democratic reflection, the project analyzes how music functions as both a tool for national unity and a medium for political dissent. While the Vietnam era saw music evolve from a source of morale into a powerful language of cultural resistance that challenged official narratives, the post-9/11 landscape was largely dominated by a conservative, pro-military consensus that framed dissent as "un-American." By identifying a persistent "Amerocentric" focus in both popular and academic discourse, this study illustrates how the arts navigate the tensions of a society under stress, revealing the critical distinction between an honest cultural reflection and manufactured nationalist propaganda.