Ripped, torn and cut
Pop, politics and punk fanzines from 1976
Herausgeber: Network, Subcultures
Ripped, torn and cut
Pop, politics and punk fanzines from 1976
Herausgeber: Network, Subcultures
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Ripped, torn and cut offers a collection of original essays exploring the motivations behind - and the politics within - the multitude of fanzines that emerged in the wake of British punk from 1976.
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Ripped, torn and cut offers a collection of original essays exploring the motivations behind - and the politics within - the multitude of fanzines that emerged in the wake of British punk from 1976.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. August 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 741g
- ISBN-13: 9781526120595
- ISBN-10: 1526120593
- Artikelnr.: 52526882
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Manchester University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. August 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 741g
- ISBN-13: 9781526120595
- ISBN-10: 1526120593
- Artikelnr.: 52526882
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Professor Keith Gildart, University of Wolverhampton; Professor Anna Gough-Yates, University of Roehampton; Dr. Sian Lincoln, Liverpool John Moores University; Professor Bill Osgerby, London Metropolitan University; Professor Lucy Robinson, University of Sussex; Professor John Street, University of East Anglia; Dr. Pete Webb, University of the West of England; Professor Matthew Worley, University of Reading
Introduction
Subcultures Network Part I: Going underground: Process and place 1. Doing it ourselves: Countercultural and alternative radical publishing in the decade before punk
Jess Baines, Tony Credland & Mark Pawson 2. Zines and history: Zines as history
Lucy Robinson 3. Whose culture? Fanzines, politics and agency
Matthew Worley 4. Invisible women: The role of women in punk fanzine creation
Cazz Blase Part II: Communiqués and celloptape: Constructing cultures 5. 'Pam Ponders Paul Morley's Cat': City Fun and the politics of post
punk
David Wilkinson 6. Goth 'zines: Writing from the dark underground, 1976
92
Claire Nally 7. The evolution of an anarcho
punk narrative, 1978
84
Russ Bestley & Rebecca Binns 8. 'Don't do as you're told, do as you think': The transgressive zine culture of industrial music in the 1970s and 1980s
Benjamin Bland 9. Are you scared to get punky? Indie pop, fanzines and punk rock
Pete Dale Part III: Memos from the frontline: Locating the source 10. Vague post
punk memoirs, 1979
89
Tom Vague 11. 'Mental liberation issue': Toxic Grafity's punk epiphany as subjectivity, (re)storying 'the truth of revolution' across the lifespan
Mike Diboll 12. From year zero to 1984: I was a pre
teen fanzine writer
Nicholas Bullen 13. Kick: Positive punk
Richard Cabut 14. 'This is aimed as much at us as at you': My life in fanzines
Clare Wadd Part IV: Global communications: Continuities and distinctions 15. Punking the bibliography: RE/Search publications, the bookshelf question and ideational flow
S. Alexander Reed 16. Punks against censorship: Negotiating acceptable politics in the Dutch fanzine Raket
Kirsty Lohman 17. Contradictory self
definition and organisation: The punk scene in Munich, 1979
82
Karl Siebengartner 18. 'Angry grrrl 'zines': Riot grrrl and body politics from the early 1990s
Laura Cofield Index
Subcultures Network Part I: Going underground: Process and place 1. Doing it ourselves: Countercultural and alternative radical publishing in the decade before punk
Jess Baines, Tony Credland & Mark Pawson 2. Zines and history: Zines as history
Lucy Robinson 3. Whose culture? Fanzines, politics and agency
Matthew Worley 4. Invisible women: The role of women in punk fanzine creation
Cazz Blase Part II: Communiqués and celloptape: Constructing cultures 5. 'Pam Ponders Paul Morley's Cat': City Fun and the politics of post
punk
David Wilkinson 6. Goth 'zines: Writing from the dark underground, 1976
92
Claire Nally 7. The evolution of an anarcho
punk narrative, 1978
84
Russ Bestley & Rebecca Binns 8. 'Don't do as you're told, do as you think': The transgressive zine culture of industrial music in the 1970s and 1980s
Benjamin Bland 9. Are you scared to get punky? Indie pop, fanzines and punk rock
Pete Dale Part III: Memos from the frontline: Locating the source 10. Vague post
punk memoirs, 1979
89
Tom Vague 11. 'Mental liberation issue': Toxic Grafity's punk epiphany as subjectivity, (re)storying 'the truth of revolution' across the lifespan
Mike Diboll 12. From year zero to 1984: I was a pre
teen fanzine writer
Nicholas Bullen 13. Kick: Positive punk
Richard Cabut 14. 'This is aimed as much at us as at you': My life in fanzines
Clare Wadd Part IV: Global communications: Continuities and distinctions 15. Punking the bibliography: RE/Search publications, the bookshelf question and ideational flow
S. Alexander Reed 16. Punks against censorship: Negotiating acceptable politics in the Dutch fanzine Raket
Kirsty Lohman 17. Contradictory self
definition and organisation: The punk scene in Munich, 1979
82
Karl Siebengartner 18. 'Angry grrrl 'zines': Riot grrrl and body politics from the early 1990s
Laura Cofield Index
Introduction
Subcultures Network Part I: Going underground: Process and place 1. Doing it ourselves: Countercultural and alternative radical publishing in the decade before punk
Jess Baines, Tony Credland & Mark Pawson 2. Zines and history: Zines as history
Lucy Robinson 3. Whose culture? Fanzines, politics and agency
Matthew Worley 4. Invisible women: The role of women in punk fanzine creation
Cazz Blase Part II: Communiqués and celloptape: Constructing cultures 5. 'Pam Ponders Paul Morley's Cat': City Fun and the politics of post
punk
David Wilkinson 6. Goth 'zines: Writing from the dark underground, 1976
92
Claire Nally 7. The evolution of an anarcho
punk narrative, 1978
84
Russ Bestley & Rebecca Binns 8. 'Don't do as you're told, do as you think': The transgressive zine culture of industrial music in the 1970s and 1980s
Benjamin Bland 9. Are you scared to get punky? Indie pop, fanzines and punk rock
Pete Dale Part III: Memos from the frontline: Locating the source 10. Vague post
punk memoirs, 1979
89
Tom Vague 11. 'Mental liberation issue': Toxic Grafity's punk epiphany as subjectivity, (re)storying 'the truth of revolution' across the lifespan
Mike Diboll 12. From year zero to 1984: I was a pre
teen fanzine writer
Nicholas Bullen 13. Kick: Positive punk
Richard Cabut 14. 'This is aimed as much at us as at you': My life in fanzines
Clare Wadd Part IV: Global communications: Continuities and distinctions 15. Punking the bibliography: RE/Search publications, the bookshelf question and ideational flow
S. Alexander Reed 16. Punks against censorship: Negotiating acceptable politics in the Dutch fanzine Raket
Kirsty Lohman 17. Contradictory self
definition and organisation: The punk scene in Munich, 1979
82
Karl Siebengartner 18. 'Angry grrrl 'zines': Riot grrrl and body politics from the early 1990s
Laura Cofield Index
Subcultures Network Part I: Going underground: Process and place 1. Doing it ourselves: Countercultural and alternative radical publishing in the decade before punk
Jess Baines, Tony Credland & Mark Pawson 2. Zines and history: Zines as history
Lucy Robinson 3. Whose culture? Fanzines, politics and agency
Matthew Worley 4. Invisible women: The role of women in punk fanzine creation
Cazz Blase Part II: Communiqués and celloptape: Constructing cultures 5. 'Pam Ponders Paul Morley's Cat': City Fun and the politics of post
punk
David Wilkinson 6. Goth 'zines: Writing from the dark underground, 1976
92
Claire Nally 7. The evolution of an anarcho
punk narrative, 1978
84
Russ Bestley & Rebecca Binns 8. 'Don't do as you're told, do as you think': The transgressive zine culture of industrial music in the 1970s and 1980s
Benjamin Bland 9. Are you scared to get punky? Indie pop, fanzines and punk rock
Pete Dale Part III: Memos from the frontline: Locating the source 10. Vague post
punk memoirs, 1979
89
Tom Vague 11. 'Mental liberation issue': Toxic Grafity's punk epiphany as subjectivity, (re)storying 'the truth of revolution' across the lifespan
Mike Diboll 12. From year zero to 1984: I was a pre
teen fanzine writer
Nicholas Bullen 13. Kick: Positive punk
Richard Cabut 14. 'This is aimed as much at us as at you': My life in fanzines
Clare Wadd Part IV: Global communications: Continuities and distinctions 15. Punking the bibliography: RE/Search publications, the bookshelf question and ideational flow
S. Alexander Reed 16. Punks against censorship: Negotiating acceptable politics in the Dutch fanzine Raket
Kirsty Lohman 17. Contradictory self
definition and organisation: The punk scene in Munich, 1979
82
Karl Siebengartner 18. 'Angry grrrl 'zines': Riot grrrl and body politics from the early 1990s
Laura Cofield Index