Get Free Shipping on orders over $0
Subcultures : Cultural Histories and Social Practice - Ken Gelder

Subcultures

Cultural Histories and Social Practice

By: Ken Gelder

Paperback | 9 January 2007 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $83.99

$77.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $19.44 with

 or 

Ships in 3 to 5 business days

This book presents a cultural history of subcultures, covering a remarkable range of subcultural forms and practices. It begins with London's 'Elizabethan underworld', taking the rogue and vagabond as subcultural prototypes: the basis for Marx's later view of subcultures as the lumpenproletariat, and Henry Mayhew's view of subcultures as 'those that will not work'. Subcultures are always in some way non-conforming or dissenting. They are social - with their own shared conventions, values, rituals, and so on - but they can also seem 'immersed' or self-absorbed. This book identifies six key ways in which subcultures have generally been understood:

  • through their often negative relation to work: idle, parasitical, hedonistic, criminal
  • their negative or ambivalent relation to class
  • their association with territory - the 'street', the 'hood', the club - rather than property
  • their movement away from home into non-domestic forms of 'belonging'
  • their ties to excess and exaggeration (as opposed to restraint and moderation)
  • their refusal of the banalities of ordinary life and in particular, of massification.

Subcultures looks at the way these features find expression across many different subcultural groups: from the Ranters to the riot grrrls, from taxi dancers to drag queens and kings, from bebop to hip hop, from dandies to punk, from hobos to leatherfolk, and from hippies and bohemians to digital pirates and virtual communities. It argues that subcultural identity is primarily a matter of narrative and narration, which means that its focus is literary as well as sociological. It also argues for the idea of a subcultural geography: that subcultures inhabit places in particular ways, their investment in them being as much imaginary as real and, in some cases, strikingly utopian.

More in Popular Culture

The Definitive Guide to Horror Movies : Horror Essentials - Kim Newman
This Year : 365 songs annotated - John Darnielle

RRP $69.99

$52.75

25%
OFF
Famesick : A Memoir - Lena Dunham

RRP $34.99

$24.99

29%
OFF
Cat - Phaidon Editors

Hardcover

RRP $69.95

$52.75

25%
OFF
Saoirse : The Work, Life, and Style of Saoirse Ronan - Kaila Hale-Stern
Diddly Squat : A Year on the Farm - Jeremy Clarkson

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
The Uncool - Cameron Crowe

Paperback

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Night People : How to Be a DJ in '90s New York City - Mark Ronson
Dead and Alive - Zadie Smith

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Harry Potter Wizard Chess Set : Rp Minis - Donald Lemke

RRP $26.99

$21.99

19%
OFF
Amateurs! : How We Built Internet Culture and Why it Matters - Joanna Walsh
Oh, Biscuits! : The Little (Grown-Up) Guide to Bluey - OH
Capitalist Realism : Is there no alternative? - Mark Fisher
Notes on 'Camp' : Penguin Modern - Susan Sontag