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Post-Punk, Politics and Pleasure in Britain

Post-Punk, Politics and Pleasure in Britain

by David Wilkinson
Hardback
Publication Date: 09/09/2016

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$213.95
As the Sex Pistols were breaking up, Britain was entering a new era. Punk's filth and fury had burned brightly and briefly; soon a new underground offered a more sustained and constructive challenge. As future-focused, independently released singles appeared in the wake of the Sex Pistols, there were high hopes in magazines like NME and the DIY fanzine media spawned by punk. Post-Punk, Politics and Pleasure in Britain explores how post-punk's politics developed into the 1980s. Illustrating that the movement's monochrome gloom was illuminated by residual flickers of countercultural utopianism, it situates post-punk in the ideological crossfire of a key political struggle of the era: a battle over pleasure and freedom between emerging Thatcherism and libertarian, feminist and countercultural movements dating back to the post-war New Left. Case studies on bands including Gang of Four, The Fall and the Slits and labels like Rough Trade move sensitively between close reading, historical context and analysis of who made post-punk and how it was produced and mediated. The book examines, too, how the struggles of post-punk resonate down to the present.
ISBN:
9781137497796
9781137497796
Category:
Social & cultural history
Format:
Hardback
Publication Date:
09-09-2016
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan
Country of origin:
United Kingdom
Pages:
228
Dimensions (mm):
210x148x18mm
Weight:
4.15kg
David Wilkinson

David Wilkinson is a practising architect with a Certificate in Gardening from The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew, London.

He has been President of The Friends of The Royal Botanic Gardens in Melbourne as well as the Victorian Committee Chair of Open Gardens Australia.

He is the author of Leslie Wilkinson: A Practical Idealist. 

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