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Mortality and Music: Popular Music and the Awareness of Death [Kõva köide]

(University of Lancaster, UK)
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The evidence of death and dying has been removed from the everyday lives of most Westerners. Yet we constantly live with the awareness of our vulnerability as mortals. Drawing on a range of genres, bands and artists,Mortality and Music examines the ways in which popular music has responded to our awareness of the inevitability of death and the anxiety it can evoke. Exploring bereavement, depression, suicide, violence, gore, and fans' responses to the deaths of musicians, it argues for the social and cultural significance of popular music's treatment of mortality and the apparent absurdity of existence.

Arvustused

Mortality and Music: Popular Music and the Awareness of Death offers a sustained examination of how contemporary popular music gives room for listeners to meaningfully negotiate the sometimes contradictory implications of modernitys denial of an afterlife. * Reading Religion * Partridge draws from an impressive array of songs, artists, and genres ... Original, engagingly written and full of ideas to consider carefully. * BASR Bulletin * [ Mortality and Music] is accessible and wide-ranging, and demonstrates an impressive depth of scholarship ... This ambitious book claims important space in this developing area of research ... [ It] is a highly engaging and thought-provoking read. * Popular Music * By focusing on death and mortality, and drawing on a fresh and distinctive body of thought, this thoughtful and strangely pleasurable book provides new resources for thinking about the role of music in contemporary culture, and in peoples lives. -- David Hesmondhalgh, Professor of Media, Music and Culture, University of Leeds, UK Once again, Christopher Partridge takes us on an adventure into rarely considered regions of the pop culture world. Bringing together two of humankinds defining experiencesour awareness of death, the possibility of a world in which we are not, and our compulsion to record, celebrate, and lament our life courses musicallyhe has given us another example of why he remains one of our premier pop culture scholars. Highly recommended. -- Douglas E. Cowan, Professor of Religious Studies and Social Development Studies, Renison University College, Canada Delightfully spooky and illuminating all at once. Christopher Partridge is Virgil-in-headphones guiding readers into the realms of the dead. Analyzing a vast catalogue of popular songs through various theoretical lenses, and considering ways artists and audiences identify with them, he finds music functioning as memento mori, reminders of mortality; as a form of memory, a medium for the returned, the revenant; and as a cultural strategy for dealing with impermanence. Violence, gore, pilgrims hanging around the graves of dead rock starsits all here, thoroughly researched and beautifully written. -- Michael J. Gilmour, Associate Professor of New Testament and English Literature, Providence University College, Canada

Muu info

Explores the significance of 'the end' and the goth in popular music and the themes' significance for understanding the sacred in the modern world.
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(8)
1 Mortality and Immortality
9(28)
The obscuring of death and decay
9(5)
Immortality and the denial of death
14(5)
Words against death
19(6)
Strategies of immortalization
25(8)
Concluding comments
33(4)
2 Death, Transgression and the Sacred
37(24)
The sacred, the profane, transgression and death
39(6)
Liminality and pissing people off
45(2)
Death and subcultural capital
47(2)
Death chic, youth culture and the romanticization of mortality
49(3)
The impure sacred
52(5)
Concluding comments
57(4)
3 The Undead and the Uncanny
61(36)
Mortality and the uncanny
62(2)
Music and uncanny affective space
64(6)
Memory and memento mori
70(3)
Hauntology, spirit voices and exorcisms
73(6)
Can the world be as sad as it seems?
79(8)
Grotesque bodies
87(6)
Concluding comments
93(4)
4 Morbidity, Violence and Suicide
97(40)
A vortex of summons and repulsion
98(2)
Thanatos, survival and schadenfreude
100(5)
Suicidal tendencies
105(12)
Disaffection, violence and death
117(7)
The pornography of gore, violence and death
124(3)
Living on death row
127(7)
Concluding comments
134(3)
5 Transfiguration, Devotion and Immortality
137(20)
A note on myth
138(1)
Transcendence and transfiguration
139(6)
Recorded immortality
145(2)
Pilgrims and dead rock stars
147(4)
Kinetic rituals
151(3)
Concluding comments
154(3)
Notes 157(30)
Bibliography 187(24)
Index 211
Christopher Partridge is Professor of Religious Studies in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster University, UK. Recent publications include The Occult World (2014, ed.,), The Lyre of Orpheus: Popular Music, the Sacred and the Profane (2013), Dub in Babylon (2010), and Holy Terror: Understanding Religion and Violence in Popular Culture (2010, ed.,). He is co-editor of Bloomsbury Studies in Religion and Popular Music.