Wednesday, 16 December 2015

OUGD501 Research - Subculture - The Meaning of Style by Dick Hebdige



OUGD501 Research - Subculture - The Meaning of Style by Dick Hebdige

Punk Ideology 


'punk aesthetic can be read in part as a white 'translation' of black 'ethnicity' 
Punk groups for instance, figured prominently in the rock against racism
The clash and The slits in particular wove reggae slogans and themes into their material
certain features were lifted directly from the West Indian rude and Rasta styles
punk music, like every other aspect of punk, tended to develop in direct antithesis to its apparent sources
punk launched frontal assaults on the established meaning systems
rigid demarcation of the line between punk rock and reggae is symptomatic not only of an 'identity crisis' 
indirectly influenced by the subcultural styles of the black immigrant community...in order to find a music which reflected more adequately their sense of frustration and oppression
objects borrowed from the most sordid of contexts found a place in the punks' ensembles...which offered self-conscious commentaries on the notions of modernity and taste p.107
reflected the tendency towards wilful desecration and the voluntary assumption of outcast status which characterised the whole punk movement 



(info on aesthetic of publication p.111-p112)

Sniffiin Glue (highest circulation) the definitive statement of punk's do-it-yourself philosophy e.g 'Here's one chord, here's two more, now form your own band'. 





Subcultural Theory 

(clothes)

barthes - 'the signification of the image is certainly intentional...the advertising image is clear, or at least emphatic' 
expressive of 'normality' as opposed to 'deviance'
(intentional communication and visible constriction) distinguishes the visual ensembles of spectacular subcultures. They display their own codes(punks ripped t-shirts) 
they have been thought about rather than thrown together 
goes against the mainstream - according to barthes, is a tendency to masquerade as nature, to substitute 'normalised' for historical forms, to translate the reality of the world into an image of the world which in turn presents itself as if composed according to 'the evident laws of the natural order' (Barthes, 1972)
ensembles are 'obviously fabricated'




could provide an attractive alternative the drudgery of manual labour, office work or a youth on the dole
made to reflect, express and resonate...aspects of group life
punk culture signified chaos, hebdige argues that it was 'extremely orderly,' explaining this paradox with the concept of homology.
punk subculture grew up partly as an antithetical response to the re-emergence of racism in the mid-70s
the key to punk style remains elusive 
punk 'escape the principle of identity' 
refusal to cohere around a readily identifiable set of central values. `it cohered, instead, elliptically through a chain of conspicuous absences. 

deliberately used to signify working-classness 

No comments:

Post a Comment