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Punk Identities, Punk Utopias: Global Punk and Media: Global Punk Series

Editat de Russ Bestley, Mike Dines, Matt Grimes, Paula Guerra
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 noi 2021
Explores the notion of identities, ideologies, and cultural discourse in contemporary global punk scenes. 

Punk Identities, Punk Utopias unpacks punk and the factors that shape its increasingly complex and indefinable social, political, and economic setting. The third offering in Intellect’s Global Punk series, produced in collaboration with the Punk Scholars Network, this volume examines the broader social, political, and technological concerns that affect punk scenes around the world, from digital technology and new media to gender, ethnicity, identity, and representation.

Drawing on scholarship in cultural studies, musicology, and social sciences, this interdisciplinary collection will add to the academic discussion of contemporary popular culture, particularly in relation to punk and the critical understanding of transnational and cross-cultural dialogue.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781789384123
ISBN-10: 1789384125
Pagini: 260
Ilustrații: 35 halftones
Dimensiuni: 170 x 244 x 18 mm
Greutate: 1.22 kg
Editura: Intellect Ltd
Colecția Intellect Ltd
Seria Global Punk Series


Notă biografică

Russ Bestley is a reader in graphic design and subcultures at the London College of Communication and editor of the journal Punk & Post-Punk. Mike Dines is co-pathway leader of popular music at Middlesex University and cofounder of the Punk Scholars Network. Matt Grimes is a senior lecturer and researcher in music industries and radio at Birmingham City University’s School of Media, UK. Paula Guerra is a researcher and professor of sociology at the Institute of Sociology of the University of Porto and adjunct professor at the Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research in Australia.

Cuprins

Introduction
 Russ Bestley, Mike Dines, Matt Grimes and Paula Guerra
 
  1. From Belfast with Love: the women and female presenting punks of Northern Ireland and  
      their ‘subculture’
      Francis Stewart
  1. The Power of Memory: Gender inequality among the Berlin psychobilly scene
      Matt Newsom
  1. Trans-Punk: Diy identities and new modes of subjectivity
      Gareth Schott 
  1. Brazilian Riot Grrrls: History, reflections and feminist empowerment in girls
      rock camps.
      Gabriela Cleveston Gelain and Mike Dines
  1. Not just Riot Grrrls! Punk rock feminism in the Philippines
      Monica Schoop
6.   Not just boys’ fun: Punks, pariah femininities, and challenges to gender hegemony
      Steve Moog
  1. Say a spell: Summoning the ghosts of post-punk Melbourne
      Donna McRae and Alexia Kannas
  1. Keeping Japanese punk film (A)LIVE: Shôzin Fukui’s concert-screening hybridity and
       Japanese Live House culture
       Mark Player
  1. ‘Back from the Grave’: Retro style and cultural memory in the Tokyo Garage Rock scene
      José Neglia
  1. The punks, the web, local concerns and global appeal: Cultural hybridity in Turkish
          hardcore punk
      Lyndon C. S. Way and Dylan Wallace
  1. Love at first sip? When Finnish hardcore punk met alcohol
        Lasse Ullvén
  1. Punk is punk but by no means punk: definition, genre evasion and the quest for an
          authentic voice in contemporary Russia
          Yngvar Steinholt    
 

Recenzii

"Pushes the parameters of punk studies. . . . Highly recommended."

“An excellent collection of articles that contribute to this growing range of new perspectives on punk around the globe. The collection engages with some of the more contemporary and urgent social and political issues researched through a lens of punk counterculture, offering new insights into the ways in which punk endures as a platform for empowering marginal and marginalized identities. The articles in this volume offer some new interpretations of how punk subculture intersects with more nuanced questions about gender, feminism, ethnicity and specific national scenes and examines, in some instances, how these emergent perspectives are represented in new media and digital technology. . . . Punk Identities, Punk Utopias offers readers an opportunity to reconsider and reframe punk as a discourse with surprisingly wide-reaching applications.”