Available Formats
Rancid Aphrodisiac: Subjectivity, Desire, and Rock 'n' Roll
By (Author) Mickey Vallee
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
12th February 2015
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Popular music
Psychoanalytical and Freudian psychology
781.6401
Hardback
160
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
378g
It has been sixty years since Rock n Roll exploded into the mainstream, yet we remain limited in our understanding of how its bawdy excesses absorbed into the annals of mass popularity in such a short amount of time. Mickey Vallee asks: what if the Rock n Roll eruption was nothing less than postwar consumer capitalism at its very best, precisely because it was taken as its very worst Vallee explores the emergence of Rock n Rolls from an entirely new theoretical disposition in order to answer this question, drawing mainly from Lacanian cultural psychoanalysis to reveal that Rock n Roll was far more conformist than we are generally led to believe; namely, that it was conformist with emerging liberal principles of freedom from the tyranny of the state. Vallee supports this proposition with detailed analyses of familiar (and not-so-familiar) characters and texts in Rock n Roll to suggest that the disruption of our symbolic economy was symptomatic of a new cultural logic of economic freedom. While not denying Rock n Rolls role in the pre-civil rights movement, Vallee refuses the possibility to deny that Rock n Rolls symbolic efficacy ultimately coordinated a neoliberal foundation to the ideology of individualism in its rhythm, instrumentation, lyrics, and vocals, where its power was at its most effective and affective.
In Rancid Aphrodisiac, Mickey Vallee completely overturns everything that we thought we knew about rock music. With a thorough grounding in Lacanian theory, Vallees book shows how rock functions as a site of excessive enjoyment that disturbs our symbolic economy. Despite the typical association of Lacan with language and speech, Vallee makes clear that Lacanian psychoanalysis can unlock the affect of rock music in a way that no other theory can. To understand rock, Rancid Aphrodisiac is a must. * Todd McGowan, Associate Professor, University of Vermont, US *
Mickey Vallee is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Lethbridge in Canada.