Almost as soon as 'club culture' took hold - during the UK's Second
Summer of Love in 1988 - its sociopolitical impact became clear, with
journalists, filmmakers and authors all keen to use this cultural
context as source material for their texts. This book uses that
electronic music subculture as a route into an analysis of these
principally literary representations of a music culture: why such
secondary artefacts appear and what function they serve. The book
conceives of a new literary genre to accommodate these stories born of
the dancefloor - 'dancefloor-driven literature'. Using interviews with
Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting (1994), alongside other
dancefloor-driven authors Nicholas Blincoe and Jeff Noon as case
studies, the book analyzes three separate ways writers draw on
electronic dance music in their fictions, interrogating that very
particular intermedial intersection between the sonic and the
linguistic. It explores how such authors write about something so
subterranean as the nightclub scene, and analyses what specific
literary techniques they deploy to write lucidly and fluidly about the
metronomic beat of electronic music and the chemical accelerant that
further alters that relationship.
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The Rave Scene in Fiction
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781501357695
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter