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Lit-Rock: Literary Capital in Popular Music

Editat de Ryan Hibbett
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 sep 2022
Just as soon as it had got rolling, rock music had a problem: it wanted to be art. A mere four years separate the Beatles as mere kiddy culture from the artful geniuses of Sergeant Pepper's, meaning the very same band who represents the mass-consumed, "mindless" music of adolescents simultaneously enjoys status as among the best that Western culture has to offer. The story of rock music, it turns out, is less that of a contagious popular form situated in opposition to high art, but, rather, a story of high and low in dialogue--messy and contentious, to be sure, but also mutually obligated to account for, if not appropriate, one another. The chapters in this book track the uses of literature, specifically, within this relation, helping to showcase collectively its fundamental role in the emergence of the "pop omnivore."
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781501354694
ISBN-10: 1501354698
Pagini: 274
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Contributors

Introduction
Ryan Hibbett, Northern Illinois University, USA

Part 1:Authorship and Authenticity
1. David Bowie's Diamond Dogs, the Cut-Up, and Rock's Unfinished Revolution
Barry J. Faulk, Florida State University, USA
2. Kurt, Kathleen 'n' Kathy: Cut-and-Paste and the Art of Being For Real
Patricia Malone, University of Aberdeen, UK

Part 2: Craft and Confession
3. Joni Mitchell and the Literature of Confession
David R. Shumway, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
4. Pop Star vs. Harvard Professor: The "Amateur" Poetry of Taylor Swift
Weishun Lu, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
5. Personae Non Grata: Dramatic Monologue and Social Pathology in Select Randy Newman Songs
John Kimsey, DePaul University, USA

Part 3: Aesthetics, Movements, Technology
6. New Wave, European Avant-Gardes, and the Unmaking of Rock Music
Chris Mustazza, University of Pennsylvania, USA
7. Cycling on Acid: The Literariness of Altered Experiences in Psychedelic Rock
Tymon Adamczewski, Kazimierz Wielki University, Bydgoszcz, Poland

Part 4: Signs and Mediations
8. A Portrait of the Artist in a Pop Song: Images of James Joyce in Popular Music
Kevin Farrell, Radford University, USA
9. "Hand in Glove": Punk, Post-punk, and Poetry
Martin Malone, University of Aberdeen, UK

Part 5: Nation and Narrative
10. Under an American Spell: U2's The Joshua Tree in the Shadow of Flannery O'Connor
Scott Calhoun, Cedarville University, USA
11. Rock, Hard-Boiled: The Mekons and American Crime Fiction
Peter Hesseldenz, University of Kentucky, USA
12. When Poetry Meets Popular Music: The Case of Polish Rock Artists in the Late Twentieth Century
Marek Jezinski, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland

Part 6: Identity and Discourse
13. "It's our version of Almost Famous": Towards a Reimagined Canon of Rock Criticism
Kimberly Mack, University of Toledo, USA
14. Limits of the Literary: Rethinking Allusions in Pop Music
Pat O'Grady, Independent Scholar, Australia

Acknowledgments
Index

Recenzii

In the hubbub that followed Bob Dylan's Nobel Prize it was clear that many commentators took it for granted that literature and popular music occupy quite different cultural spheres. The essayists in this collection disagree. Here Taylor Swift, Kathy Acker, Flannery O'Connor, and Joni Michell get the same respect, Bowie, Burroughs, Browning, and Bono equal billing, and Dashiell Hammett and James Joyce are no more (or less) iconic figures than the Polish singer songwriter Czeslaw Nieman or the British band The Mekons. This book challenges literary and rock academics alike and Ryan Hibbett's crackerjack introduction should be on all their reading lists.
With Lit-Rock, Ryan Hibbett and his rich stable of contributors make a compelling case for the vital and ongoing role of literary art in popular music. Moving well beyond the tired debates over whether rock lyrics are poetry, the essays here bring nuance and new insight into the complicated pas de deux of lit and rock that has too often been figured as flowing in one direction only, rock riding on literature's coattails. Hibbett's opening essay is a marvel: wide ranging, erudite-a revelation.