We Shall Not Be Moved/No nos moverán

Biography of a Song of Struggle

by David Spener

Included in round 2 of Knowledge Unlatched.


The activist anthem “We Shall Not Be Moved” expresses resolve in the face of adversity; it helps members of social movements persevere in their struggles to build a better world. The exact origins of the song are unknown, but it appears to have begun as a Protestant revival song sung by rural whites and African slaves in the southeastern United States in the early nineteenth century. The song was subsequently adopted by U.S. labor and civil rights activists, students and workers opposing the Franco dictatorship in Spain, and by Chilean supporters of that country’s socialist government in the early 1970s.


In his fascinating biography, We Shall Not Be Moved, David Spener details the history and the role the song has played in each of the movements in which it has been sung. He analyzes its dissemination, function, and meaning through a number of different sociological and anthropological lenses to explore how songs can serve as an invaluable resource to participants in movements for social change.

Metadata

  • isbn
    978-1-4399-1299-7
  • publisher
    Temple University Press
  • publisher place
    Philadelphia, PA
  • restrictions
    CC-BY NC ND
  • rights
    Copyright 2016 Available under a CC-BY-NC-ND license.
  • rights holder
    Temple University - of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania