Aesthetic Amalgams and Political Pursuits: Intertextuality in Music Videos
By (Author) Tomasz Dobrogoszcz
Edited by Agata Handley
Edited by Tomasz Fisiak
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
14th November 2024
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Digital, video and new media arts
Popular culture
Philosophy: aesthetics
780.267
Hardback
320
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This open access book illustrates how intertextuality in music videos can be used to create new aesthetic patterns and develop a political agenda. In an age when most people are immersed in popular culture, music videos often bridge the gap between readily accessible and more demanding artistic forms. Music videos can sensitize the audience to various eminent themes, motifs, and artistic conventions by means of transferring them into a familiar medium. The efficacy of this process is enhanced through the use of intertextual references to other culture products, whereby meanings are conveyed in a highly condensed form. At the same time, intertexts connected with particular art forms can undergo significant revisions through the cultural context in which a new music video is produced: the amalgam of word, sound and image initiates innovative readings of familiar motifs and transforms the understanding of literature, music, film, and fine arts. Located at the intersection of different semiotic systems, music videos can juxtapose notions from contrasting areas folk culture, myth, politics, psychology, aesthetics in unconventional ways. Authored by a group of international scholars, implementing various conceptual approaches, and analyzing an original selection of artists, this collection of essays examines music videos as an innovative transmedial practice which employs intertextuality both to create new aesthetic patterns and to develop a political agenda. The book views creative intertextuality as a token of the hybrid nature of present-day audio-visual popular culture and contemporary (post)human subjectivity in general. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.
Tomasz Dobrogoszcz is Professor of Philology at the University of Lodz, Poland. He is the editor of Nobody Expects the Spanish Inquisition: Cultural Contexts In Monty Python (2014) and is the author of Family and Relationships in Ian McEwans Fiction (2018). Agata Handley is Assistant Professor of Philology at the University of Lodz, Poland. She is the author of Constructing Identity: The Poetry of Tony Harrison (2021) and Co-Editor-in-Chief of the interdisciplinary academic journal Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture. Tomasz Fisiak is Assistant Professor in the Department of Canadian, Intermedial and Postcolonial Studies, Institute of English Studies at the University of Lodz, Poland. He is the author of She-(d)evils: The Construction of a Female Tyrant as a Cultural Critique (2020) and a co-editor of The Postworld In-Between Utopia and Dystopia: Intersectional, Feminist, and Non-Binary Approaches in 21st-Century Speculative Literature and Culture (2021). He is Managing Editor of the interdisciplinary academic journal Text Matters: A Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture.