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Mad Dogs and Englishness: Popular Music and English Identities

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Mad Dogs and Englishness: Popular Music and English Identities

Contributors:

By (Author) Lee Brooks
Edited by Mark Donnelly
Edited by Dr Richard Mills

ISBN:

9781501352027

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic USA

Publication Date:

18th April 2019

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Popular music
Sociology
Music reviews and criticism

Dewey:

781.640942

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

240

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Weight:

327g

Description

Mad Dogs and Englishness connects English popular music with questions about English national identities, featuring essays that range across Bowie and Burial, PJ Harvey, Bishi and Tricky. The later years of the 20th century saw a resurgence of interest in cultural and political meanings of Englishness in ways that continue to resonate now. Pop music is simultaneously on the outside and inside of the ensuing debates. It can be used as a mode of commentary about how meanings of Englishness circulate socially. But it also produces those meanings, often underwriting claims about English national cultural distinctiveness and superiority. This books expert contributors use trans-national and trans-disciplinary perspectives to provide historical and contemporary commentaries about pops complex relationships with Englishness. Each chapter is based on original research, and the essays comprise the best single volume available on pop and the English imaginary.

Reviews

With Brexit looming, and ongoing questions of Britishness and Englishness in relation to borders, immigration, migrant workers and national independence within the United Kingdom being asked, this book couldnt be more timely. * Punk & Post-Punk *
Theres an old, oft-used, truism that the arts help us make sense of the world in which we live. Never has the world needed such conduits to comprehension as we do today, as we grapple with the seemingly unthinkable reality of the post-Brexit United Kingdom standing separate from Europe, and the juggernaut that is the United States of America lying in the unpredictable hands of Donald Trump, a surely it couldnt happen president. Within the arts, popular music functions as both a contemporaneous mirror to the society in which it was spawned and a potent agent for enlightenment, protest, and change. In Mad Dogs and Englishness an admirably broad and talented team of international scholars unpicks the cultural and political implications of being English, as represented through the always exciting lens of popular music. The problem of being English is tackled head-on in this watershed volume that ranges admirably free of disciplinary fences. * Ian Chapman, Senior Lecturer in Music, The University of Otago, New Zealand *

Author Bio

Lee Brooks, Mark Donnelly and Richard Mills work in the School of Arts and Humanities at St Marys University, Twickenham, UK. They have extensive experience of teaching courses on popular music cultures. They have also published on subjects such as Sixties Britain, The Beatles and Morrissey.

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