No machos or pop stars : when the Leeds art experiment went punk /

Publication Type:

Book

Authors:

Butt, Gavin,

Source:

Duke University Press,, Durham, United States, p.1 online resource (xviii, 290 pages) : (2022)

Call Number:

ML3534.6.G7

URL:

https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=3329910

Keywords:

(OCoLC)fst00815432, (OCoLC)fst01084152, (OCoLC)fst01084153, (OCoLC)fst01744377, 20e siècle., 20th century., Art, ART / History / Contemporary (1945-), Art and society, Art and society., Art et société, bisacsh, England, Étude et enseignement, fast, Histoire, History, History and criticism., MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Punk., Post-punk music, Punk culture, Punk culture and art, Punk culture and art., Punk culture., Punk rock music, Punk rock music., Social aspects, Study and teaching

Notes:

Description based on print version record.Includes bibliographical references and index.Beginning from a dead-end -- Anarchy at the Poly -- Punk Bohemians -- Debating society -- Why theory? -- No machos or pop stars, please -- Electric shock -- Rehearsals for the Mutant Disco -- Epilogue: The limits of experiment-1981 and after."No Machos or Pop Stars presents an extensive social history of the entanglement between punk rock and art college radicalism in the Northern English city of Leeds in the 1970s and 1980s. This relationship, at times critical and other times contesting, paved the way for the punk rock genre to become self-aware about the larger societal structures in which it was caught. Gavin Butt considers the ways that art school made it possible to hear the critique of ideology in music and, perhaps somewhat against the odds, paved the way for it becoming a popular sound in British and international youth culture. The book follows bands like Gang of Four, Scritti Politti, and Soft Cell to tell a different genealogy of art and music based on an exploration of the limits and possibilities of art education, especially in response to the challenges of making art after the avant-garde. Based on extensive original interviews with band members, the book pinpoints a crisis of state-funded English art education and disillusionment with the avant-garde as twin conditions for post-punk's emergence in the city."--