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This volume critically examines 'subculture' in a variety of Australian contexts, exploring the ways in which the terrain of youth cultures and subcultures has changed over the last two decades and considering whether 'subculture' still works as a viable conceptual framework for studying youth culture. Bringing together the latest interdisciplinary
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This volume critically examines 'subculture' in a variety of Australian contexts, exploring the ways in which the terrain of youth cultures and subcultures has changed over the last two decades and considering whether 'subculture' still works as a viable conceptual framework for studying youth culture. Bringing together the latest interdisciplinary
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 477g
- ISBN-13: 9780367599690
- ISBN-10: 0367599694
- Artikelnr.: 66597102
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 477g
- ISBN-13: 9780367599690
- ISBN-10: 0367599694
- Artikelnr.: 66597102
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Sarah Baker is Associate Professor in Cultural Sociology in the School of Humanities, Griffith University, Australia. She is the co-author of Creative Labour: Media Work in Three Cultural Industries and Teaching Youth Studies Through Popular Culture, and co-editor of Redefining Mainstream Popular Music. Brady Robards is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Tasmania, Australia. He is the co-author of Teaching Youth Studies Through Popular Culture and co-editor of Mediated Youth Cultures: The Internet, Belonging, and New Cultural Configurations. Bob Buttigieg is currently completing a PhD in the School of Humanities at Griffith University, Australia.
Introduction: Youth Culture Research in Australia Part I Theoretical
Matters 1 Australian Subcultures: Reality or Myth? 2 Youth Studies and the
Problem of Structure and Agency: Foucault vs Marx, Tait vs Sercombe, Beck
vs Bourdieu, Woodman vs Threadgold vs Roberts 3 Global Youth Culture and
Dynamic Social Contexts 4 Holding It All Together: Researching Time,
Culture and Belonging After 'Subcultures' 5 (Sub)Cultural Capital, DIY
Careers and Transferability: Towards Maintaining 'Reproduction' when Using
Bourdieu in Youth Culture Research 6 Learning to Be Otherwise: Ethnicity
and the Pedagogic Space of Youthful Subjectivities Youth Cultures and
Subcultures Part II The Place of Belonging 7 The Moral Economy of the Mosh
Pit: Straight Edge, Reflexivity and Classification Struggles 8 Brutal
Belonging in Other Spaces: Grindcore Touring in Melbourne and Osaka 9
Spaces and Places of Meaning and Belonging: Young People's Experiences of
the Australian Defence Force Cadet Organisations 10 'What Every Other Leb
Wears': Intra-Ethnic Tensions Among Lebanese-Australian Youth 11 Vernacular
Subculture and Multiplicity in Everyday Experiences of Belonging Part III
Gendered Experiences 12 Where Are the Straight Edge Women? 13 From the
Subcultural to the Ordinary: DIY Girls Since Grrrlpower 14 Gangsta Warrior
Bro: Hip-hop and Urban Aboriginal Youth 15 Girls' 'Pain Memes' on YouTube:
The Production of Pain and Femininity on a Digital Network 16 Occupying the
Mainstream: Performing Hegemonic Masculinity in Gold Coast Nightclub 17
'Bringing the Vibe': Subcultural Capital and 'Hardcore' Masculinity 18
Subjective Understanding of 'Subculture': Contemporary Roller Derby in
Australia and the Women Who Play 19 Young Women, Activism and the 'Politics
of (Sexual) Choice': Are Australian Youth Cultures Post-Feminist? Part IV
Doing Subcultural Studies 20 'Queer Youth' on Australia's Gold Coast:
Researching Amid Incoherence and Multiplicity 21 Sexualities and
Sensitivities: Queer(y)ing the Ethics of Youth Research in the Field 22
Documenting the Subcultural Experience: Towards an Archive of Australian
Youth Histories 23 Tricks with Mirrors: Sharpies and Their Representations
24 Reconciling Subculture and Effects Studies: What Do Students in
Australia Want to Know About Media Cultures?
Matters 1 Australian Subcultures: Reality or Myth? 2 Youth Studies and the
Problem of Structure and Agency: Foucault vs Marx, Tait vs Sercombe, Beck
vs Bourdieu, Woodman vs Threadgold vs Roberts 3 Global Youth Culture and
Dynamic Social Contexts 4 Holding It All Together: Researching Time,
Culture and Belonging After 'Subcultures' 5 (Sub)Cultural Capital, DIY
Careers and Transferability: Towards Maintaining 'Reproduction' when Using
Bourdieu in Youth Culture Research 6 Learning to Be Otherwise: Ethnicity
and the Pedagogic Space of Youthful Subjectivities Youth Cultures and
Subcultures Part II The Place of Belonging 7 The Moral Economy of the Mosh
Pit: Straight Edge, Reflexivity and Classification Struggles 8 Brutal
Belonging in Other Spaces: Grindcore Touring in Melbourne and Osaka 9
Spaces and Places of Meaning and Belonging: Young People's Experiences of
the Australian Defence Force Cadet Organisations 10 'What Every Other Leb
Wears': Intra-Ethnic Tensions Among Lebanese-Australian Youth 11 Vernacular
Subculture and Multiplicity in Everyday Experiences of Belonging Part III
Gendered Experiences 12 Where Are the Straight Edge Women? 13 From the
Subcultural to the Ordinary: DIY Girls Since Grrrlpower 14 Gangsta Warrior
Bro: Hip-hop and Urban Aboriginal Youth 15 Girls' 'Pain Memes' on YouTube:
The Production of Pain and Femininity on a Digital Network 16 Occupying the
Mainstream: Performing Hegemonic Masculinity in Gold Coast Nightclub 17
'Bringing the Vibe': Subcultural Capital and 'Hardcore' Masculinity 18
Subjective Understanding of 'Subculture': Contemporary Roller Derby in
Australia and the Women Who Play 19 Young Women, Activism and the 'Politics
of (Sexual) Choice': Are Australian Youth Cultures Post-Feminist? Part IV
Doing Subcultural Studies 20 'Queer Youth' on Australia's Gold Coast:
Researching Amid Incoherence and Multiplicity 21 Sexualities and
Sensitivities: Queer(y)ing the Ethics of Youth Research in the Field 22
Documenting the Subcultural Experience: Towards an Archive of Australian
Youth Histories 23 Tricks with Mirrors: Sharpies and Their Representations
24 Reconciling Subculture and Effects Studies: What Do Students in
Australia Want to Know About Media Cultures?
Introduction: Youth Culture Research in Australia Part I Theoretical
Matters 1 Australian Subcultures: Reality or Myth? 2 Youth Studies and the
Problem of Structure and Agency: Foucault vs Marx, Tait vs Sercombe, Beck
vs Bourdieu, Woodman vs Threadgold vs Roberts 3 Global Youth Culture and
Dynamic Social Contexts 4 Holding It All Together: Researching Time,
Culture and Belonging After 'Subcultures' 5 (Sub)Cultural Capital, DIY
Careers and Transferability: Towards Maintaining 'Reproduction' when Using
Bourdieu in Youth Culture Research 6 Learning to Be Otherwise: Ethnicity
and the Pedagogic Space of Youthful Subjectivities Youth Cultures and
Subcultures Part II The Place of Belonging 7 The Moral Economy of the Mosh
Pit: Straight Edge, Reflexivity and Classification Struggles 8 Brutal
Belonging in Other Spaces: Grindcore Touring in Melbourne and Osaka 9
Spaces and Places of Meaning and Belonging: Young People's Experiences of
the Australian Defence Force Cadet Organisations 10 'What Every Other Leb
Wears': Intra-Ethnic Tensions Among Lebanese-Australian Youth 11 Vernacular
Subculture and Multiplicity in Everyday Experiences of Belonging Part III
Gendered Experiences 12 Where Are the Straight Edge Women? 13 From the
Subcultural to the Ordinary: DIY Girls Since Grrrlpower 14 Gangsta Warrior
Bro: Hip-hop and Urban Aboriginal Youth 15 Girls' 'Pain Memes' on YouTube:
The Production of Pain and Femininity on a Digital Network 16 Occupying the
Mainstream: Performing Hegemonic Masculinity in Gold Coast Nightclub 17
'Bringing the Vibe': Subcultural Capital and 'Hardcore' Masculinity 18
Subjective Understanding of 'Subculture': Contemporary Roller Derby in
Australia and the Women Who Play 19 Young Women, Activism and the 'Politics
of (Sexual) Choice': Are Australian Youth Cultures Post-Feminist? Part IV
Doing Subcultural Studies 20 'Queer Youth' on Australia's Gold Coast:
Researching Amid Incoherence and Multiplicity 21 Sexualities and
Sensitivities: Queer(y)ing the Ethics of Youth Research in the Field 22
Documenting the Subcultural Experience: Towards an Archive of Australian
Youth Histories 23 Tricks with Mirrors: Sharpies and Their Representations
24 Reconciling Subculture and Effects Studies: What Do Students in
Australia Want to Know About Media Cultures?
Matters 1 Australian Subcultures: Reality or Myth? 2 Youth Studies and the
Problem of Structure and Agency: Foucault vs Marx, Tait vs Sercombe, Beck
vs Bourdieu, Woodman vs Threadgold vs Roberts 3 Global Youth Culture and
Dynamic Social Contexts 4 Holding It All Together: Researching Time,
Culture and Belonging After 'Subcultures' 5 (Sub)Cultural Capital, DIY
Careers and Transferability: Towards Maintaining 'Reproduction' when Using
Bourdieu in Youth Culture Research 6 Learning to Be Otherwise: Ethnicity
and the Pedagogic Space of Youthful Subjectivities Youth Cultures and
Subcultures Part II The Place of Belonging 7 The Moral Economy of the Mosh
Pit: Straight Edge, Reflexivity and Classification Struggles 8 Brutal
Belonging in Other Spaces: Grindcore Touring in Melbourne and Osaka 9
Spaces and Places of Meaning and Belonging: Young People's Experiences of
the Australian Defence Force Cadet Organisations 10 'What Every Other Leb
Wears': Intra-Ethnic Tensions Among Lebanese-Australian Youth 11 Vernacular
Subculture and Multiplicity in Everyday Experiences of Belonging Part III
Gendered Experiences 12 Where Are the Straight Edge Women? 13 From the
Subcultural to the Ordinary: DIY Girls Since Grrrlpower 14 Gangsta Warrior
Bro: Hip-hop and Urban Aboriginal Youth 15 Girls' 'Pain Memes' on YouTube:
The Production of Pain and Femininity on a Digital Network 16 Occupying the
Mainstream: Performing Hegemonic Masculinity in Gold Coast Nightclub 17
'Bringing the Vibe': Subcultural Capital and 'Hardcore' Masculinity 18
Subjective Understanding of 'Subculture': Contemporary Roller Derby in
Australia and the Women Who Play 19 Young Women, Activism and the 'Politics
of (Sexual) Choice': Are Australian Youth Cultures Post-Feminist? Part IV
Doing Subcultural Studies 20 'Queer Youth' on Australia's Gold Coast:
Researching Amid Incoherence and Multiplicity 21 Sexualities and
Sensitivities: Queer(y)ing the Ethics of Youth Research in the Field 22
Documenting the Subcultural Experience: Towards an Archive of Australian
Youth Histories 23 Tricks with Mirrors: Sharpies and Their Representations
24 Reconciling Subculture and Effects Studies: What Do Students in
Australia Want to Know About Media Cultures?