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Boys, Bass and Bother = Popular Danc...
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Hall, Jo.
Boys, Bass and Bother = Popular Dance and Identity in UK Drum ’n’ Bass Club Culture /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Boys, Bass and Bother/ by Jo Hall.
Reminder of title:
Popular Dance and Identity in UK Drum ’n’ Bass Club Culture /
Author:
Hall, Jo.
Description:
XI, 245 p. 5 illus.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Dance. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-37511-7
ISBN:
9781137375117
Boys, Bass and Bother = Popular Dance and Identity in UK Drum ’n’ Bass Club Culture /
Hall, Jo.
Boys, Bass and Bother
Popular Dance and Identity in UK Drum ’n’ Bass Club Culture /[electronic resource] :by Jo Hall. - 1st ed. 2018. - XI, 245 p. 5 illus.online resource.
1. Mapping the multifarious -- 2. Complex identities -- 3. Origin Unknown -- 4. Inner City Life -- 5. Original Nuttah -- 6. Super Sharp Shooter -- 7. Heterocorporealities.
This book uses ethnographic research to examine the role of dance in the construction of identity in the distinctly British electronic dance music club culture of drum ’n’ bass. Dancing is revealed as the central way in which drum ’n’ bass clubbers construct and perform their identities, which are informed, although not defined, by the club culture’s histories. The intertextual and intercultural development of drum ’n’ bass musical and clubbing culture is shown to be represented in the dancing body, prompting a challenge to the discourse of cultural appropriation. Popular representations of identities are embodied by drum ’n’ bass clubbers through affective transmission via the popular screen, and in this process are re-valued in their embodiment. Using a socially orientated understanding of intertextuality, the popular dancing body is shown to be heterocorporeal: containing traces of prior meaning and logic yet replete with new meaning and significance. .
ISBN: 9781137375117
Standard No.: 10.1057/978-1-137-37511-7doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
556850
Dance.
LC Class. No.: PN1560-1590
Dewey Class. No.: 792.8
Boys, Bass and Bother = Popular Dance and Identity in UK Drum ’n’ Bass Club Culture /
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1. Mapping the multifarious -- 2. Complex identities -- 3. Origin Unknown -- 4. Inner City Life -- 5. Original Nuttah -- 6. Super Sharp Shooter -- 7. Heterocorporealities.
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This book uses ethnographic research to examine the role of dance in the construction of identity in the distinctly British electronic dance music club culture of drum ’n’ bass. Dancing is revealed as the central way in which drum ’n’ bass clubbers construct and perform their identities, which are informed, although not defined, by the club culture’s histories. The intertextual and intercultural development of drum ’n’ bass musical and clubbing culture is shown to be represented in the dancing body, prompting a challenge to the discourse of cultural appropriation. Popular representations of identities are embodied by drum ’n’ bass clubbers through affective transmission via the popular screen, and in this process are re-valued in their embodiment. Using a socially orientated understanding of intertextuality, the popular dancing body is shown to be heterocorporeal: containing traces of prior meaning and logic yet replete with new meaning and significance. .
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Literature, Cultural and Media Studies (R0) (SpringerNature-43723)
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