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A Cultural Dictionary of Punk Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)

A Cultural Dictionary of Punk By Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)

A Cultural Dictionary of Punk by Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)


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Summary

Examines punk as a movement. This book contains descriptions of the sounds, and places those sounds in the context of history. Drawing on many fanzines, magazines, and newspapers, it provides a portrait of the ways in which punk was an expression of defiance. It covers many of the legendary punk bands, as well as the obscure, forgotten ones.

A Cultural Dictionary of Punk Summary

A Cultural Dictionary of Punk: 1974-1982 by Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)

This is a fascinating guide to a critical time in music and cultural history. A Cultural Dictionary of Punk is a bold book that examines punk as a movement that is best understood by placing it in its cultural field. It contains myriad descriptions of the sounds of the time, but also places those sounds in the context of history. Drawing on hundreds of fanzines, magazines, and newspapers, the book is - in the spirit of punk - an obsessive, exhaustively researched and sometimes deeply personal portrait of the many ways in which punk was an expression of defiance. The format consists of distinct entries on everything from Lester Bangs to The Slits, from Jimmy Carter to Minimalism, from 'Dot Dash' to Bad Brains. Both highly informative and thrillingly idiosyncratic, the book takes a fresh look at how the malaise of the 1970s offered fertile ground for punk - as well as the new wave, post-punk, and hardcore - to emerge as a rejection of the easy platitudes of the dying counter-culture. The organization is accessible and entertaining. Rombes upends notions that the story of punk can be told in a chronological, linear fashion. Meant to be read straight through or opened up and experienced at random, A Cultural Dictionary of Punk covers not only many of the well-known, now-legendary punk bands, but the obscure, forgotten ones as well.

A Cultural Dictionary of Punk Reviews

Nicholas Rombes answers many of the questions I didn't know I had... It's about time someone wrote a textbook on these things. -The Rumpus
An expansive, erudite, and hugely entertaining guide through the dark alleys and glittering byways of punk-in music, film, literature, politics, fashion-A Cultural Dictionary of Punk is essential reading for anyone fascinated by one of the most influential artistic movements of our time. -Elizabeth Hand, author of Generation Loss
At a cursory glance, Rombes's compendium has the form of a dictionary, covering punk bands from the Adolescents to the Zeroes, but scratch the surface and you'll discover a profoundly weird document, where the notion of punk expands to include discussions of Angela Carter, Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo and Barry Hannah-although even Rombes admits the last is stretching the point. The tone veers from the academic to the confessional: How can you hesitate about a song that has saved you more than once from the black depths you are prone to fall into? Rombes asks in an entry concerning the British band Wire. There are several forays into the fictional, including stories about imagined versions of Patti Smith and Joey Ramone, as well as entries written by Ephraim P. Noble, who is almost certainly a fictional alter ego. If it were touted as a definitive guide to punk culture, the dictionary's omissions would be glaring-but this is something altogether different: a personal investigation into the significance of punk rock, an attempt to inject critical studies with a big dose of chaos and anarchy and thereby create a compelling cultural narrative.-Publishers Weekly
Rombes, the author of works on punk musicians and cinema, here examines punk as a cultural movement through A-to-Z entries drawing upon fanzines, magazines, and newspapers to place media and artists in the context of history. In the author's own words, he has allowed the content of the entries to determine their shape, format and tone. The result is an eclectic examination of the punk movement as well as the cultural and historical issues surrounding it. The book concludes with a postscript analyzing the end of the punk movement in 1982. BOTTOM LINE: The author's love and knowledge of the punk era shines throughout the work. There are several other books on punk, but this one's focus on the general historical and cultural perspective of the movement, as well as its accessible and informal style, makes it a worthy addition to the literature. An excellent overview of the era for any library.-Library Journal
Rombes has assembled a proudly subjective collection of touchstones through which he attempts to discern, if not a definition of punk, then at least some semblance of its signifiers' import in his own sense of self....Even while assembling texts and quoting from wide and varied sources, what Rombes does more than anything is provide evidence-evidence and validation that this thing punk is as significant to the world at large as it is to him.-The Agit Reader
I take a little notebook wherever I go -- I'm sure some of you do this, too -- so that anytime I hear about a cool film or something I should check out, I can jot it down immediately. A Cultural Dictionary of Punk is like a compilation of everything I've scribbled in little notebooks over the last 15 years. ...Much has been written on the subject, but this well-researched and respectful title is one book that should be appreciated, not rejected, by today's punk scene.-Whitney Matheson, USA Today's PopCandy
After a first read, I now know that A Cultural Dictionary of Punk 1974-1982 will be for me a traveling companion, a friend, for the rest of the way. Author Nicholas Rombes makes the dictionary format yield the urgency, brevity, and speedy darkness of Punk as a musical method, Punk as a cultural necessity. But the book is really a love letter, proud, bitter, flabbergasted, and true. His subjectivity serves him, and the reader, well. Start with his stuff on The Clash, The Ramones, Nirvana (yes: punk), Sixties, punk as a rejection of . . . . Rombes makes you want to write your own dark dictionary.Do it. Do it fast. -S.X. Rosenstock, a poet and writer for the Huffington Post
'I'm obsessed with Nicholas Rombes' amazing book, A Cultural Dictionary of Punk from Continuum Books, and carry it everywhere.' -- The Huffington Post
The cover is perfect; no one person has a hold on punk, so no one person could ever be the face for it (Sid Vicious be damned!). http://new.flavorwire.com/196081/some-of-our-favorite-punk-book-covers/2 -- Flavorpill
Rombes makes A Cultural Dictionary important by clearly writing about the weird marginal forces that swirled into CREEM-reading, all night donut shop youth haunted Ohio at the end of the Vietnam war era, and editing out a ton of stuff called punk in the years since 1982.-KEXP, Seattle
Part guide, part archive (there are many images from the era never before reprinted), part postmodern study... [A Cultural Dictionary of Punk] is far more punk than its academic title lets on.-The Rumpus
Rombes launches arguments and counterarguments...that make the selections of his dictionary as provocative as Jon Savage in England's Dreaming. ...A challenging lexicography.Record Collector -- Ian Abrahams
Nearly all the dictionary entries dealing with Cleveland, Ohio and New York City and their denizens (Pere Ubu, The Eels, Peter Laughner, Dead Boys in the former; Ramones, Patti Smith, Richard Hell in the latter) are tremendously evocative... The Wire, December 2009
Any dictionary which includes entries on X Ray Spex Germ Free Adolescents alongside Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow just has to be worth a read. And it is. And you should. Read it that is. Total Music, January 2010.
Excellent - Jon Savage

About Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)

Nicholas Rombes is a professor of English at the University of Detroit Mercy. His books include Ramones (Continuum), New Punk Cinema, and the forthcoming Cinema in the Digital Age. He has written for Exquisite Corpse, McSweeney's online, and CTheory.

Table of Contents

400 Blows / Adolescents /Adverts / Against Method / Agnew, Spiro / 'Alternative Ulster' / 'Anarchy is Dead' / Angry Young Men / Art and Fear /'Art of Noise,' / futurist manifesto / 'Art Rock' / Ashbery, John / Ask the Dust / Avengers / Bad Brains / Bad Taste in 1974 / Balm, Trixie A. / Bangs, Lester / 'Biafra: 6,591 votes (3%)!!' / Blank1 / Blank2 / Blank3 / Blank Generation / 'Blank Generation' / 'Beat Generation' / The Bloody Chamber / Boredom / Brando, Marlon / British National Front / Buffalo, New York / Callaghan, James: Prime Minister of Great Britain / Carter, Jimmy / Carter, Jimmy-and the new wave / Cassidy and Bangs in 1977 / 'Cindy' / Cities, decay and beauty of / Clash, the / Class / Cleveland, Ohio / compact audio cassette / Cooper, Alice / Cox, Alex / C.P.O. Sharkey / 'Punk Rock Sharkey' / Cramps: Live at Napa State Mental Hospital / Criticism, rock / Dancing / 'Death of Punk' / Dead Boys / Demics, the / Destroy All Monsters / Dhalgren / Dickies / Dictators / Dils / Diodes / Dogs / 'John Rock 'n Roll Sinclair' / John Sinclair / 'Dot Dash' / Down-and-out during the punk era, the fun of being / East Village Eye / Eater / Ejectors / electric eels / entertainment! / 'Experts Propose Study of 'Craze' / Feelies / Fifties, nostalgia for / The Foreigner / 'Frankie Teardrop' / 'Full Speed Ahead' / Further Temptations / Generation X / Germs / Germ Free Adolescents / Gibson, William / Glass, Philip / 'Going Underground' / Graham, Bill / Gravity's Rainbow / Great Jones Street / Gulcher / 'Gunning for Sex Pistols' / The Gun Rubber / Hannah, Barry / 'Happy Birthday, Stephanie' / Headlines, 1977 / Helen Keller / Herman's Hermits / High-Rise / Hippies, Johnny Rotten comments about / 'Horror Business' / Horses / 'How Could I' / 'I Got You Babe' / The Ice Age / implied velocity / 'I waste hours keeping my soul out of the cauldron' / I'm OK-You're OK / Jarmusch, Jim / Jim Basnight and the Moberlys / Jungle Rot / 'Keep Yours Dreams' / Kentucky Fried Movie / 'L.A. Punk' / Ladies and Gentlemen the Fabulous Stains / La Guardia, Fiorello Henry / Leon, Craig / Lowell, Robert / MTV / Mad Magazine, punk and / Marbles / Meltzer, Richard / 'The Menace and Charm of Punk Rock' / Milk 'n' Cookies' / Minimalism / 'Mistakism' / Mo-dettes / 'the most absurd year in the history of rock 'n' roll' / 'Neat, Neat, Neat' / Nervous Breakdown / Nervus Rex / 'New Dark Ages' / 'New Music, The' / The New Wave / New Wave Theatre / 'New Way' / Nirvana / Nixon, Richard / Nobody's Heroes / Non Compos Mentis / No Policy / No Wave / Normals / Nostalgia / 'Notes on the New American Cinema' / 'not exactly what you would consider melodic' / Nuns / Oblique Strategies / Only Ones / 'Ottawa Today' / Out of Vogue / Outsider, The / Pagans / 'Paint it Black' / Para-Punk Cinema / Patti / Penetrators / Pere Ubu / Pettibon, Raymond / 'Police State' / Punk, alternate meanings of / Punk, as 'honored' / 'punk is inconceivable without the bleak failure of the Sixties' / Punk, its influence on something other than music or fashion / 'Punk rock is a put on' / 'Punk Rock: the arrogant underbelly of Sixties pop' / 'Punk Rock Rises Again!!', Creem headline / 'Punk Root' / 'Question of Degree, A' / Radio On / 'Radio Wunderbar' / Raincoats / Ramones [1974- ] / Ramone, Joey (and Joey Miserable and the Worms) / Ramones, the first album in ten tracks / Ramones, as 'trivial' / as 'great' / Ramones, first lines of songs on first three albums / Reagan, Ronald / 'Read About Seymour' / Real Life / Rebel Without a Cause / 'Receiving End' / Rent Act / Rimbaud, Arthur / Road Warrior, The / Rocket from the Tombs, four sentences about / Rocket from the Tombs, two songs by / Rockwell, John / Rombes, Kori Ann / Saints / Screamers / SCUM Manifesto / Second Extermination Nite / 'See No Evil' / self-referential, punk as / 'Seventeen' / Shirkers / Shivvers / 'short-lived fad, a' / 'Singles reviewed / 'Sister Ray' / Sixties, punk as a rejection of / Sixties, punk as an affirmation of / Six Million Dollar Man, The / Skunks / Sleepers / Slits / 'Slouching Towards Bethlehem' / 'So Cold' / social threat of punk, the / 'Something's happening' / 'Sonic Reducer' / Sonic Youth / Speedies / Spheeris, Penelope / Spock, Benjamin / Starburn: The Story of Jenni Love / Static Disposal / Sterling, Linder / 'still bewildered by the death-machine' / Stooges / 'Strange' / Student Teachers / Suicide / Survival Research Laboratories (SRL) / Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) / Target Video / Teen Idles / 'That's Entertainment' / 'The music is primal, mindless, without climaxes' / 'The ongoing force of me' / Theoretical Girls / theory, punk as a form of / 'There are Only Three Rock Groups in America' / 'There is nothing inherently wonderful about starkness' / 'The World's a Mess; It's In My Kiss' / Troggs / Truth about punk, the / 'TV Babies' / Undertones / Vast Majority / Vertigo / Vibrators / Vietnam War / Viletones / vinyl / Wallace and Ladmo Show, the / Warhol, Andy / Weirdos / 'When You're Young' / Whistle Punk / Who Killed Bambi? / 'Why?' / 'Write Down Your Number' / 'Xerox Days' / Zeros

Additional information

GOR007792187
9780826427793
0826427790
A Cultural Dictionary of Punk: 1974-1982 by Nicholas Rombes (University of Detroit Mercy, USA)
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2009-09-14
336
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - A Cultural Dictionary of Punk