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E-book

Title Australian metal music : identities, scenes, and cultures / edited by Catherine Hoad
Edition First edition
Published Bingley, UK : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2019

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Description 1 online resource
Series Emerald studies in metal music and culture
Emerald studies in metal music and culture.
Contents Prelims -- Critical Introduction: what is 'Australian' about Australian heavy metal? -- Part I: Australian metal identities: masculine genealogies and trajectories -- Chapter 1: Heavy metal kids: a historiographical exploration of australian proto-heavy metal in the 1960s1970s -- Chapter 2: 'A blaze in the northern suburbs': Australian extreme metal's larrikinish lineage -- Chapter 3: 'We're just normal dudes': hegemonic masculinity, Australian identity, and parkway drive -- Part II: Australian metal scenes in the East and West -- Chapter 4: ' I think sydney's pretty shit': Melbourne grindcore fans and their others -- Chapter 5: Frontierswomen and the Perth scene: female metal musicians on the 'Western front' and the construction of the gothic sublime -- Part III: Cultures of resistance in Australian metal -- Chapter 6: Creeping Sharia: an extreme response to Islamophobia -- Chapter 7: 'This is the funeral of the earth': the 'dead-end' environmental discourses of Australian ecometal -- Afterword being metal, being Australian? Reflections and an afterword -- Appendix Seminal Australian metal albums: a list by the contributors -- Index
Summary Defining 'Australian metal' is a challenge for scene members and researchers alike. Australian metal has long been situated in a complex relationship between local and global trends, where the geographic distance between Australia and metal music's seemingly traditional centres in the United States and United Kingdom have meant that metal in Australia has been isolated from international scenes. While numerous metal scenes exist throughout the country, 'Australian metal' itself, as a style, as a sound, and as a signifier, is a term which cannot be easily defined. This book considers the multiple ways in which 'Australianness' has been experienced, imagined, and contested throughout historical periods, within particular subgenres, and across localised metal scenes. In doing so, the collection not only explores what can be meant by Australian metal, but what can be meant by 'Australian' more generally. With chapters from researchers and practitioners across Australia, each chapter maps the distinct ways in which 'Australianness' has been grappled with in the identities, scenes, and cultures of heavy metal in the country. Authors address the question of whether there is anything particularly 'Australian' about Australian metal music, finding that often the 'Australianness' of Australian metal is articulated through wider, mythologised archetypes of national identity. However, this collection also reveals how Australianness can manifest in metal in ways that can challenge stereotypical imaginings of national identity, and assert new modes of being metal 'downungerground'
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed June 19, 2019)
Subject Heavy metal (Music) -- Australia
Heavy metal (Music) -- Social aspects -- Australia
Rock music -- Australia -- History and criticism
Cultural studies.
MUSIC -- Instruction & Study -- Theory.
Heavy metal (Music)
Rock music
Australia
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
Author Hoad, Catherine, editor
ISBN 9781787691698
1787691691
9781787691674
1787691675