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Networks of sound, style and subversion

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This book examines the birth of punk in the UK and its transformation, within a short period of time, into post-punk. Deploying innovative concepts of ‘critical mass’, ‘social networks’ and ‘music ...
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  • 01 February 2015
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This book examines the birth of punk in the UK and its transformation, within a short period of time, into post-punk. Deploying innovative concepts of ‘critical mass’, ‘social networks’ and ‘music worlds’, and using sophisticated techniques of ‘social network analysis’, it teases out the events and mechanisms involved in punk’s ‘micro-mobilisation’, its diffusion across the UK and its transformation in certain city-based strongholds into a variety of interlocking post-punk forms. Nick Crossley offers a detailed review of prior work in this area, a rich exploration of new empirical data and a highly innovative and robust approach to the study of ‘music worlds’.

Written in an accessible style, this book is essential reading for anybody with an interest in either UK punk and post-punk or the impact of social networks on cultural life and the potential of social network analysis to explore this impact.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Music and Society
Publication Date: 01 February 2015
ISBN: 9780719088650
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

MUSIC / History & Criticism, Popular music, Music reviews and criticism

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In sum, Networks of Sound, Style and Subversion can be appreciated on a number of different levels: as a case study of micro-mobilisation, as a demonstration of the explanatory powers of social network analysis, and as an account of 1970s punk and post-punk that breathes new life into a well worn subject.

'This book should appeal ultimately not just to scholars of punk or post-punk, but also to anyone interested in the process through which musical styles emerge.'
Brian F. Wright, Fairmont State University, Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association, June 2016

‘This is the most recent contribution to punk scholarship and in many ways one of the most sophisticated, both in terms of empirical research and data analysis.’
WILKINSON, D., WORLEY, M. and STREET, J. (2016) ‘“I Wanna See Some History”: Recent Writing on British Punk’, Contemporary European History, pp. 1–15

Nick Crossley is Professor of Sociology at the University of Manchester

1 Introduction
2 Music worlds
3 Explaining punk: a review of existing accounts
4 Theorising micro-mobilisation: critical mass, collective effervescence, social networks and social space
5 Micro-mobilisation and the network structure of the London punk world
6 The evolution of the London network
7 Punk goes national: broadcast networks, media and moral panic
8 From Punk to post-punk: a tale of three cities
9 Joining the dots: post-punk worlds as networks
10 The small world of British post-punk
11 Conclusion
Index