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Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers Mathijs Peters

Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers By Mathijs Peters

Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers by Mathijs Peters


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Summary

This book explores the ways in which popular music can criticise political, social and economic structures, through the lens of alternate rock band Manic Street Preachers.

Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers Summary

Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers by Mathijs Peters

This book explores the ways in which popular music can criticise political, social and economic structures, through the lens of alternate rock band Manic Street Preachers. Unlike most recent work on popular music, Peters concentrates largely on lyrical content to defend the provocative claim that the Welsh band pushes the critical message shaped in their lyrics to the forefront. Their music, this suggests, along with sleeve art, body-art, video-clips, clothes, interviews and performances, serves to emphasise this critical message and the primary role played by the band's lyrics.

Blending the disciplines of popular music studies, culture studies and philosophy, Peters confronts the ideas of German philosopher and social critic Theodor W. Adorno with the entire catalogue of Manic Street Preachers, from their 1988 single 'Suicide Alley' to their 2018 album Resistance is Futile. Although Adorno argues that popular music is unable to resist the standardising machinery of consumption culture, Peters paradoxically uses his ideas to show that Manic Street Preachers releases shape 'critical models' with which to formulate social and political critique.

This notion of the 'critical model' enables Peters to argue that the catalogue of Manic Street Preachers critically addresses a wide range of themes, from totalitarianism to Holocaust representation, postmodern temporality to Europeanism, and from Nietzsche's ideas about self-overcoming to reflections on digimodernism and post-truth politics. The book therefore persuasively shows that Manic Street Preacher lyrics constitute an intertextual network of links between diverse cultural and political phenomena, encouraging listeners to critically reflect on the structures that shape our lives.


About Mathijs Peters

Mathijs Peters lectures at the Philosophy Department at Utrecht University, The Netherlands.

Table of Contents

1. Making Music Redundant.- 2. An Exclusive Language.- 3. The Windowless Monad.- 4. Detournement, Subjectivity and Popular Modernism: Generation Terrorists, Gold Against the Soul andThe Holy Bible.- 5. Embodiment and Self-Overcoming: Everything Must Go, 'Judge Yr'Self' and Journal for Plague Lovers.- 6. Marxist Specters and Alternative Futures: Everything Must Go, This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours, Know Your Enemy and Lifeblood.- 7. Locality and Internationality: Rewind the Film and Futurology.- 8. Conclusion.

Additional information

NPB9783030430993
9783030430993
3030430995
Popular Music, Critique and Manic Street Preachers by Mathijs Peters
New
Hardback
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
2020-07-30
442
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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