What John Prine's Music Reminds Us After the Cancellation of Our NEH Grant
Singer-songwriter John Prine performs at Atlanta Symphony Halll on April 23, 1975 in Atlanta, Ga. Credit - Tom Hill—Getty Images
On April 11th, we were made aware that our National Endowment for the Humanities grant, ''Boundless Love': Changing Understandings of the Sacred in Americana Music,' had been terminated—only one year into its two-year plan.
Our grant of nearly $150,000 was aimed at developing the skills of undergraduate college students to conduct interdisciplinary humanities research about religion and culture, then translate that research for a public audience. Our goal for the project was to explore how Americana music has occupied a borderland in our culture's sonic landscape and has captured the American experiment in song. By examining Americana artists and their music, we intended to help students explore how aspects of American culture, our religion and spirituality, and our political fissures might be explored via our country's roots music.
Our grant was modest, less than $75,000 a year—not even a drop in the bucket compared to the over $38 billion in funding DOGE architect Elon Musk and his businesses have received in 'contracts, loans, subsidies and tax credits' from the federal government. But even that small amount has thus far afforded our students significantly more enrichment than they would typically receive in a class: collaborative teaching, outside consultants who bring top-tier advice and insights, licenses for professional software, access to archives, and face-to-face interviews with top names in Americana music. To date, we have received no official explanation as to why our funding has been terminated.
Nor are we alone. DOGE has now issued termination notices to nearly two-thirds of NEH staff members and has cancelled funding for approximately 1400 projects and organizations that rely on the NEH. And though recent cuts to the NIH, CDC, USAID, EPA, and the National Parks Service have rightly been in the spotlight for imperiling public health, diplomacy, and the environment, these smaller cuts to smaller agencies are devastating in their own right.
As professors in English and Religion at Belmont University, a mid-sized ecumenical Christian university in Nashville, Tenn., grant work has been new to us. Unlike our colleagues in the sciences at research institutions, our work is rarely deemed important enough to warrant outside support. But the NEH—which supports schools, universities, and humanities councils throughout the US with funds appropriated by Congress on a bipartisan basis—is 'prestige blind,' which means they award grants to high-quality projects regardless of institutional profile.
This past year alone, for instance, our students have done extensive archival research using primary documents housed at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Archives in Nashville. They've completed interviews with multiple Grammy-nominated and Grammy-winning artists, including Molly Tuttle, Ketch Secor of Old Crow Medicine Show, Amythyst Kiah, Tammy Rogers of The SteelDrivers, and many others. A key feature of the project was to develop a radio documentary series, tentatively titled 'Halfway to Heaven,' inspired by a line in the John Prine song, 'Paradise,' to address the evolution of American spirituality as it has been expressed in this uniquely American musical genre.
Our project used John Prine as a touchstone because his career, from his initial smash review by Roger Ebert in 1970 to his death in 2020, neatly frames a 50-year window into the great American conversation. 'Paradise' is a cautionary tale that recalls a once-beloved small town in Kentucky bulldozed and strip-mined in the name of profit; when the song's narrator asks to go back to Paradise, his father reminds him that it's been hauled away by a coal train. Whether capturing the futility of the Vietnam War in 'Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore,' bemoaning the deadly bigotry of post-9/11 politicians in 'Some Humans Ain't Human,' or presaging our current political division in 'Caravan of Fools,' Prine provided a consistent voice of moral clarity, capturing the zeitgeist in a way that was empathetic, wry, and above all, humane.
Our students have examined how Prine and his fellow Americana artists harness what religious scholar Christopher Partridge calls the 'boundary-crossing power of music' in pursuit of community. Through their research and interviews, students have discovered that Prine was not just a musician or storyteller, but something else too: a sort of folk theologian, packaging philosophical treatises in three-minute narratives and preaching the gospel of conscience through, in the words of songwriter Harlan Howard, 'three chords and the truth.'
To an eye trained on 'government efficiency,' perhaps cancelling humanities grants seems like a shrewd move. But to us it seems akin to strip-mining a town called Paradise: marginally profitable in the short term, but at what cost in the end?
Read More: What DOGE Is Doing Across the Federal Government
These relentless assaults by the Trump administration have been overwhelming in a way that feels intentional–every day news that another agency, endowment, or institute has been defunded. Regarding the loss of our grant, we have felt a mix of sadness and anger. Having now spent an academic year with twenty remarkably smart and creative students doing the work of this grant has been a sheer gift. But now, our work, which had been slated to continue next year with a new batch of students who would benefit from the grant, is now entirely in jeopardy. Without grant funding, we will not be able to replicate the quality of the experience our first year of students had, will not be able to hire the consultants we need, nor will we be able to produce the rest of the project to the degree that we had intended.
If we are not careful, the overwhelm can render us numb and apathetic. And history often reminds us that apathy is a dangerous path. Some are beginning to stand up. Harvard University, for instance, is leading in this respect, resisting many of the Trump administration's overreaching and inappropriate demands, a decision that has resulted in the federal government freezing over $2 billion of funding for the university. Harvard's faculty union and the American Association of University Professors have filed suit against the government's review of a total of $9 billion in funding. As academics, we are heartened that more institutions—not just those with deep pockets—are joining Harvard in standing up against these assaults on our freedoms.
As citizens, we must resist these cuts however we can, even if only by remaining clear-eyed about the destruction they have wrought. Like an excavator pushing aside topsoil for the vein of minerals underneath, these cuts are violent and indiscriminate, devastating individual livelihoods and scarring communities. We may not be able to stop the machine as it strip-mines Paradise, but we can tell the truth about what has been lost.
It's the necessary good work of the arts and the humanities to document, dissect, and analyze the current cacophony of our American moment. After all, what becomes of a country that does not recognize its own history, music, art, and culture—indeed, its own humanity—as a worthy pursuit? Well, to borrow a title from another John Prine song: 'That's How Every Empire Falls.'
Contact us at letters@time.com.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Black America Web
2 hours ago
- Black America Web
10 Jams To Celebrate Caribbean-American Heritage Month
Caribbean-American Heritage Month, celebrated every June, honors the rich contributions of Caribbean-Americans to the United States. From politics to sports, and especially music, their impact has left an indelible mark on American culture. This month invites the nation to recognize and celebrate the vibrant traditions, history, and talent of Caribbean-American communities. One of the most influential areas of Caribbean-American expression is music. Genres like reggae, calypso, and dancehall have taken root in the U.S., influencing hip-hop, pop, and R&B. Through their rhythmic energy and lyrical depth, these artists embody the essence of Caribbean-American culture. Their music bridges generations and inspires listeners worldwide. Here's a list of 10 unforgettable songs by Caribbean-American musicians, showcasing their diverse nationalities. 10 Jams To Celebrate Caribbean-American Heritage Month was originally published on 1. Harry Belafonte – 'Day-O (The Banana Boat Song)' Nationality: Jamaican 2. Johnny Kemp – 'Just Got Paid' Nationality: Bahamian 3. Maxwell – 'Lifetime' Nationality: Haitian & Puerto Rican 4. Fridayy – 'When It Comes To You' Nationality: Haitian 5. Nicki Minaj – 'Moment 4 Life' Nationality: Trinidadian 6. Heavy D – Big Daddy Nationality: Jamaican 7. Busta Rhymes – 'In The Ghetto' Nationality: Jamaican 8. Wyclef Jean – 'Gone Till November' Nationality: Haitian 9. Lenny Kravitz – 'It Ain't Over Til It's Over' Nationality: Bahamian 10. The Notorious B.I.G. – 'Juicy' Nationality: Jamaican
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Tyler Perry Slams Erasure Of Black History In Politically Charged BET Speech
Tyler Perry wasted no time tearing into Trump's administration and the divisive state of America during the BET Awards Monday night. After sharing a brief story about his son, the billionaire media mogul launched into an impassioned State of the Union-esque address to condemn what has been happening in the country as of late — specifically with the erasure of Black history. 'I want you to pay attention to— don't miss this,' he began onstage. 'They are removing our books from libraries. They are removing our stories and our history. They are removing our names from government buildings as if someone wants to erase our footprints.' 'Because what we need to understand is that if our children don't know our history, they won't know our power,' Perry added. The filmmaker pointed his message to Black viewers, telling them, 'The truth of the matter [is], it's impossible to erase our footprints, because we left them on water. What I mean by that is, we were snatched from our homeland, bought across the ocean and left footprints all the way to America.' Perry continued his history lesson, nodding to the sanitation of African American history in museums and calling out American tragedies like the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, where several businesses were famously burned down on Oklahoma's Black Wall Street in an effort to destroy the thriving community. 'So, this is not the time to be silent,' Perry continued to the audience. 'This is not the time to give up. This is the time to dig in and keep leaving footprints everywhere you go.' He even took a moment to brag about how he's 'made more Black millionaires than any studio in this city combined.' 'Because I'm making footprints,' he added. Perry concluded his powerful speech, saying, 'So I don't care if you're struggling, if you're trying to make it, if you're trying to build a business. If you have a dream, keep making footprints. Don't let anybody stop you. You can do it.' Perry isn't the only star who took hold of the BET Awards spotlight to deliver a politically charged message. Doechii, who won Best Female Hip-Hop Artist, used her acceptance speech to blast the 'ruthless attacks' from Trump's administration after it deployed military forces on Los Angeles protests over the weekend over immigration raids. 'Trump is using military forces to stop a protest,' she said. 'And I want y'all to consider what kind of government it appears to be when every time we exercise our democratic rights to protest, the military is deployed against us.' 'I feel it's my responsibility as an artist to use this moment to speak up for all oppressed people,' the rapper added. 'For Black people, for Latino people, for trans people, for the people of Gaza, we all deserve to live in hope and not in fear, and I hope we stand together, my brothers and my sisters, against hate. And we protest against it.' Doechii Blasts Trump's 'Ruthless' Deployment Of Military Against Protesters In BET Awards Speech Kevin Hart Jokes About Diddy Without Even Saying His Name The Complete List Of 2025 BET Awards Winners
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Country Star Conner Smith Kills Elderly Woman in Car Accident: Police
Originally appeared on E! Online Conner Smith is at the center of an ongoing investigation. The country artist was behind the wheel of a pickup truck that struck a pedestrian June 8 in Nashville, according to a press release from the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department. The 77-year-old victim, identified as Dorothy Dobbins, appeared to be walking inside a marked crosswalk when the incident occurred, according to authorities. She was taken to Vanderbilt University Medical Center, where she died shortly thereafter. Authorities listed the preliminary contributing factor for the fatal accident as Smith's failure to yield the right of way to Dobbins, noting in the release that the 24-year-old showed 'no signs of impairment.' No charges have been filed in the case. One day after the tragedy, Smith's attorney addressed the matter on behalf of the musician. 'On June 8th, Mr. Smith was involved in a car accident that tragically claimed a life,' Worrick G. Robinson said in a statement to E! News. 'His heart goes out to Ms. Dobbins' family during this incredibly difficult time.' More from E! Online Justin Bieber Slams "Transactional Relationships' After Hailey Bieber Split Rumors Blake Lively Breaks Silence on Legal Victory Against Justin Baldoni Farrah Abraham's Daughter Sophia Shares Rare Glimpse at Family Vacation Robinson added, 'Mr. Smith continues to cooperate fully with the ongoing investigation.' Smith first rose to prominence in 2021 with his viral single 'I Hate Alabama' and released his debut album Smoky Mountains in 2024. Earlier in the weekend, he performed at the 2025 CMA Fest in Nashville, describing the event as a career highlight. 'I just remember coming down here and watching people on that stage and dreaming about it, and looking up to the guys on that stage,' he said in an interview with American Songwriter posted on their TikTok page June 9. 'And then when you get to be up there and see people come in and pack out that lawn for you, it feels really cool.' Smith, who wed surfer Leah Thompson in April 2024, added that having his loved ones present made the performance all the more memorable. 'We always have family and friends out here as well,' he continued, calling the gig 'a really special moment.' For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App