‘No Feelings’, ‘No Fun’, ‘No Future’. The years 1976-84 saw punk emerge and evolve as a fashion, a musical form, an attitude and an aesthetic. Against a backdrop of social fragmentation, violence, high unemployment and socio-economic change, punk rejuvenated and re-energised British youth culture, inserting marginal voices and political ideas into pop. Fanzines and independent labels flourished; an emphasis on doing it yourself enabled provincial scenes to form beyond London’s media glare. This was the period of Rock Against Racism and benefit gigs for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the striking miners. Matthew Worley charts the full spectrum of punk’s cultural development from the Sex Pistols, Buzzcocks and Slits through the post-punk of Joy Division, the industrial culture of Throbbing Gristle and onto the 1980s diaspora of anarcho-punk, Oi! and goth. He recaptures punk’s anarchic force as a medium through which the frustrated and the disaffected could reject, revolt and re-invent.
No Future: Punk, Politics and British Youth Culture, 19761984
$482.79
Peso | 23.99 kg |
---|---|
ISBN | |
ISBN13 | |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Binding | |
Lenguage | |
Publish Year | |
Pages |
Productos relacionados
-
The Light of Days: The Untold Story of Women Resistance Fighters in Hitler’s Ghettos
$608.79 Añadir al carritoValorado con 0 de 5 -
Everybody Lies: Big Data, New Data, and What the Internet Can Tell Us About Who We Really Are
$356.79 Añadir al carritoValorado con 0 de 5 -
Common Core Achieve, Mathematics Subject Module (BASICS & ACHIEVE)
$445.83 Añadir al carritoValorado con 0 de 5 -
Cassandra Speaks: When Women Are the Storytellers, the Human Story Changes
$587.79 Añadir al carritoValorado con 0 de 5