The sharper word: a Mod anthology
Publisher: Helter Skelter Publishing, 1999001: 6965ISBN: 1900924102Subject(s): Subcultures | CultureOnline resources: Click here to access onlineItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 306.1 HEW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 046258 |
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306.1 FOR Wreckers of civilisation: the story of Coum Transmission and Throbbing Gristle | 306.1 GEL Subcultures : cultural histories and social practice / | 306.1 HAE Subcultures / | 306.1 HEW The sharper word: a Mod anthology | 306.1 HEW The soul stylists: forty years of Modernism | 306.1 HIL Fan cultures / | 306.1 HOD Goth : identity, style and subculture / |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Since the celebrated rise of Britpop, the peculiarly British mod phenomena has been back in the media spotlight. Now paolo Hewitt, celebrated rock journalist and biographer of Oasis, The Jam and The Small Faces, has collected together some of the best writings on mod: the music, the fashions and the entire way of life. Going beyond the surface cliches, Hewitt's hugely readable collection fully documents one of the most misunderstood cultural movements of our time with writing as sharp as the creases in a zoot suit.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
As portrayed in the Who rock opera Quadrophenia, the mods were a working-class British youth cult in the mid-1960s preoccupied with mohair suits, dance clubs, scooters, and amphetamines. Rock journalist Hewitt borrows short snippets from Richard Barnes's standard Mods! (Plexus Pub., 1994), fiction by Tom Wolfe and Samuel Selvon, scholarly accounts by Stanley Cohen and Dick Hebdige, and oral histories. More obscure mod-related pieces, including an interview with top mod Pete Meaden, a 1960s article by fashion queen Mary Quant, and an unpublished eyewitness account by mod pioneer Irish Jack are also included. Though he somewhat neglects the mod drive for upward mobility after the lingering postwar economic squalor, Hewitt provides marvelous descriptions of mod trappingsDthe fashion, the music, the drugs, the clubsDthat clearly demonstrate the roots of Britpop and Austin Powers. Recommended for anyone interested in social history, youth movements, Carnaby Street, and rock'n'roll.DDave Szatmary. Univ. of Washington (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.There are no comments on this title.
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