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Post-Subcultures Reader, The


Post-Subcultures Reader, The

Paperback by Muggleton, David; Weinzierl, Rupert

Post-Subcultures Reader, The

£29.99

ISBN:
9781859736685
Publication Date:
1 Dec 2003
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:
Berg Publishers
Pages:
336 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 21 - 26 May 2024
Post-Subcultures Reader, The

Description

Once it was just Mods and Rockers or Hippies and Skinheads. Now we have Riot Grrls and Rappers; Modern Primitives and Metalheads; Goths, Clubcultures and Fetishists; Urban Tribes, New Age Travellers and Internet fan groups. In a global society with a rapid proliferation of images, fashions and lifestyles, it is -unsurprisingly - becoming increasingly difficult to pinpoint what 'subculture actually means. Enthusiastically adopted by the media and academia, subculture may be a convenient way to describe more unconventional aspects of youth culture, but it does little to help us comprehend the diverse range of youth groups in todays so-called postmodern world. How can we begin to rethink, reformulate and replace outdated notions of subcultures to make them applicable to the experiences of youth in the twenty-first century? And to what extent does this involve the challenging of past orthodoxies about spectacular subcultural styles? From Seattle anarchist punks to UK Asian underground music, Canadian female X-Files fans to Australian dance cultures, this groundbreaking book draws on a wide variety of international case studies to investigate the new relationships among youth subcultural music, politics and taste. Is it possible to work within the existing limitations of subculture, or has the concept exhausted its usefulness? Can attempts at re-conceptualization, such as neo-tribes, sub-streams and micro-networks, adequately capture the experience of fragmentation, flux and fluidity that is central to contemporary youth culture? This timely book is the first to challenge and reconsider the use of subculture. In doing so, it questions the possibility and relevance of what might be termed post-subcultural studies and helps to chart the emergence of a new paradigm for the study of youth subculture.

Contents

What is 'Post-subcultural Studies' Anyway? Tastefully Renovating Subcultural Theory: Making Space for a ew Model Image, Body and Performativity: The Constitution of Subcultural Practice in the Globalized World of Pop 'Oh Bondage, Up Yours!' Or Here's Three Chords, Now Form a Band: Punk, Masochism, Skin, Anaclisis, Defacement Post-Rave Technotribalism and the Carnival of Protest Bridging the Micro-Gap: Is there such a Thing as Post-subcultural Politics? Unlearning to Raver: Techno-Party as the Contact Zone in Trans-Local Formations Constructing 'Neo-Tribal' Identities through Dress: Modern Primitives and Body Modification Between Criminal and Political Deviance: A Sociological Analysis of the New York Chapter of the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation Racial Hybridity: Latinas/os as the Paradigmatic Transnational Post-subculture 'Race' and Class in the 'Post-subcultural' Economy Diaspora Experience, Music and Hybrid Cultures of Young Migrants in Vienna Global Youth Cultures in Localized Spaces: The Case of the UK New Asian Dance Music and French Rap Heavy Metal and Subcultural Theory: A Paradigmatic Case of Neglect? The Death and Life of Punk, the Last Subculture 'Lady' Punks in Bands: A Subculturette? Resisting Subjects: DIY Feminism and the Politics of Style in Subcultural Production 'The X-Files', Online Fan Club and the David Duchovny Estrogen Brigades 'Net.Goth': Internet Communication and (Sub)Cultural Boundaries Internet Subcultures and Oppositional Politics

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