Skip to product information
1 of 1

Great Satan's rage

Regular price £85.00
Sale price £85.00 Regular price £0.00
Sale Sold out
This book looks at how American rap/metal has engaged with America's defining role in the world after the Cold War. It offers a highly original approach in relating rap/metal to critical theories o...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 31 March 2008
View Product Details

This book looks at how rap and metal, the two most pervasive popular music forms of the 1990s, have been highly engaged with America’s role in the world, supercapitalism and their own role within it. This has especially been the case when genres – hitherto clearly identified as indelibly ‘black’ or ‘white’ forms of music – have crossed over as an effect of cross-racial forms of identification and desire, marketing strategy, political engagement, opportunism and experimentation. It is how examples of these forms have negotiated, contested, raged against, survived, exploited, simulated and performed 'Satan’s rage' that is the subject of this book.

The book offers a highly original approach in relating rap/metal to critical theories of economy and culture, introducing a new method of cultural analysis based on theories of negativity and expenditure that will be of great interest to students in media and cultural studies, American studies, critical and cultural theory, advertising and marketing, and sociology and politics.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £85.00
Pages: 208
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 31 March 2008
ISBN: 9780719074639
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture, Cultural studies, MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Rap & Hip Hop, Popular culture, Popular music

REVIEWS Icon
Great Satan's Rage is a cogently argued and meticulously researched book that authoritatively weaves a dazzling array of ideas and theorists. As such, it makes an important contribution to the study of popular music within a social, political and economic context, and suggests that extreme music still has much to rage against., Lee Barron, The French Journal of Popular Music Studies Volume ! no 9-2
Scott Wilson is Professor in Media and Cultural Studies at Kingston University

List of figures
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
2. Supercapitalism
3. Negativity
4. Niggativity
5. X-essence of the wigga
6. Big Momma Thang
7. Mom and pop rage
8. Columbine
9. Rage of the machine
10. Joy metal
11. All is war
Bibliography
Discography
Index