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The Year's Work in the Punk Bookshelf, Or, Lusty Scripts

Part of the The Year's Work: Studies in Fan Culture and Cultural Theory series
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This is the story of the books punks read and why they read them.

The Year's Work in the Punk Bookshelf challenges the stereotype that punk rock is a bastion of violent, drug-addicted, uneducated drop outs.

Brian James Schill explores how, for decades, punk and postpunk subculture has absorbed, debated, and reintroduced into popular culture, philosophy, classic literature, poetry, and avant-garde theatre.

Connecting punk to not only Hegel, Nietzsche, and Freud, but Dostoevsky, Rimbaud, Henry Miller, Kafka, and Philip K.

Dick, this work documents and interprets the subculture's literary history.

In detailing the punk bookshelf, Schill contends that punk's literary and intellectual interests can be traced to the sense of shame (whether physical, socioeconomic, cultural, or sexual) its advocates feel in the face of a shameless market economy that not only preoccupied many of punks' favorite writers but generated the entire punk polemic.

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RRP £76.00
Product Details
Indiana University Press
0253029236 / 9780253029232
Hardback
306.1
25/09/2017
United States
English
384 pages : illustrations (black and white)
18 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More