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Dancefloor-Driven Literature: The Rave Scene in Fiction

Autor Simon A. Morrison
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 13 mai 2020
Almost as soon as 'club culture' took hold - during the UK's Second Summer of Love in 1988 - its sociopolitical impact became clear, with journalists, filmmakers and authors all keen to use this cultural context as source material for their texts. This book uses that electronic music subculture as a route into an analysis of these principally literary representations of a music culture: why such secondary artefacts appear and what function they serve. The book conceives of a new literary genre to accommodate these stories born of the dancefloor - 'dancefloor-driven literature'. Using interviews with Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting (1994), alongside other dancefloor-driven authors Nicholas Blincoe and Jeff Noon as case studies, the book analyzes three separate ways writers draw on electronic dance music in their fictions, interrogating that very particular intermedial intersection between the sonic and the linguistic. It explores how such authors write about something so subterranean as the nightclub scene, and analyses what specific literary techniques they deploy to write lucidly and fluidly about the metronomic beat of electronic music and the chemical accelerant that further alters that relationship.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501357671
ISBN-10: 1501357670
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Electronic Dance Music culture remains a current and contemporary scene and one with a healthy research community, per the journal DanceCult, for example. However, no book has yet considered the important literary fictions that have used this culture as context.

Notă biografică

Simon A. Morrison is Programme Leader for Music Journalism at the University of Chester, UK. He is author of the book Discombobulated (2010) and has reported on the music scene everywhere from Beijing to Brazil; Moscow to Marrakech. He edited Ministry of Sound's Ibiza magazine and has also produced and presented TV and radio. A screenplay he penned, based on a story he wrote for The Guardian, is about to be produced by the BBC, for broadcast in 2019.

Cuprins

List of FiguresPrefacePermissionsAcknowledgements1. Introduction: Writing the Beat2. Sub- vs Supraterranean Cultures3. Revealing the Scene: The Global Roots of Subterranean Club Cultures4. Re/presentations of EDMC in Popular Culture Media5. Defining Dancefloor-Driven Literature6. Case Study One: The Figurative Use of Music in the Work of Irvine Welsh7. Case Study Two: Musical Mechanics in the Fiction of Jeff Noon8. Case Study Three: Literary Diegesis in the Writing of Nicholas Blincoe 9. Conclusion: Towards Subterranean Systems TheoryGlossary of Terms and TheoriesNotesBibliographySelect EDMC DiscographyEDMC Filmography Appendix I: A Catalogue of Dancefloor-Driven LiteratureIndex

Recenzii

[An] excellent book ... A particular strength of this book is Morrison's ability to dance between literary theory, thick description, journalistic interviews and unabashed connoisseurship with elegance and ease. ... Highly recommended.
Simon A. Morrison appears from his discombobulating adventures to take the reader on a unique tour of the rave scene through a study of dance-driven literature. Following on from Sarah Champion's edited collections of rave inspired short stories and Steve Redhead's introduction to 'repetitive beat generation' authors, he shows how fiction conveys the subjective experiences of electronic dance music culture through a range of approaches that can be beneficial to the further development of subcultural studies.
Morrison analyses hallucinatory stories of the 1990s dance floor, documenting the emergence of a new literary genre. He shows how the intermediation of music and language created an experimental form of writing with the DJ as modern minstrel and the author as subcultural mischief-maker. A witty, fascinating, immersive study.