Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’

Empirical studies of youth cultures and subcultures continue to flourish alongside active theoretical progression and debates within and across a variety of intellectual traditions. Annually, a range of published articles, monographs and edited collections improve our collective knowledge about yout...

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Main Author: Williams, James Patrick
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145751
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1457512023-03-05T15:32:22Z Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’ Williams, James Patrick School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Sociology Subculture Cultural Sociology Empirical studies of youth cultures and subcultures continue to flourish alongside active theoretical progression and debates within and across a variety of intellectual traditions. Annually, a range of published articles, monographs and edited collections improve our collective knowledge about youth (sub)cultural phenomena from nearly every corner of the globe. In this article I review two recent edited volumes that deal explicitly with subculture studies: The Subcultures Network’s Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change (2014, Cambridge Scholars Publishing) and Baker, Robards and Buttigieg’s Youth Cultures and Subcultures: Australian Perspectives (2015, Ashgate). I provide a brief description and summative evaluation of each volume and then organize the review itself in terms of a set of topics that I find to be most salient across the many chapters: identity and identification, centre and periphery, social media, and history. The review moves back and forth between the two volumes as I bring together chapters that are conceptually or analytically similar. My goal is not only to review the significance of the various published studies, but to highlight the continued relevance of the subculture concept. Accepted version 2021-01-07T02:20:08Z 2021-01-07T02:20:08Z 2018 Journal Article Williams, J. P. (2019). Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’. YOUNG, 27(1), 89-105. doi:10.1177/1103308818761271 1103-3088 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145751 10.1177/1103308818761271 1 27 89 105 en YOUNG © 2018 Sage Publications and YOUNG Editorial Group. All rights reserved. This paper was published in YOUNG and is made available with permission of Sage Publications and YOUNG Editorial Group. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Sociology
Subculture
Cultural Sociology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Sociology
Subculture
Cultural Sociology
Williams, James Patrick
Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
description Empirical studies of youth cultures and subcultures continue to flourish alongside active theoretical progression and debates within and across a variety of intellectual traditions. Annually, a range of published articles, monographs and edited collections improve our collective knowledge about youth (sub)cultural phenomena from nearly every corner of the globe. In this article I review two recent edited volumes that deal explicitly with subculture studies: The Subcultures Network’s Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change (2014, Cambridge Scholars Publishing) and Baker, Robards and Buttigieg’s Youth Cultures and Subcultures: Australian Perspectives (2015, Ashgate). I provide a brief description and summative evaluation of each volume and then organize the review itself in terms of a set of topics that I find to be most salient across the many chapters: identity and identification, centre and periphery, social media, and history. The review moves back and forth between the two volumes as I bring together chapters that are conceptually or analytically similar. My goal is not only to review the significance of the various published studies, but to highlight the continued relevance of the subculture concept.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Williams, James Patrick
format Article
author Williams, James Patrick
author_sort Williams, James Patrick
title Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
title_short Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
title_full Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
title_fullStr Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
title_full_unstemmed Subculture’s not dead! Checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘Subcultures, Popular Music and Political Change’ and ‘Youth Cultures and Subcultures : Australian perspectives’
title_sort subculture’s not dead! checking the pulse of subculture studies through a review of ‘subcultures, popular music and political change’ and ‘youth cultures and subcultures : australian perspectives’
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145751
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