Club Cultures: Music, Media and Subcultural CapitalThis is an innovative contribution to the study of popular culture, focusing on the youth cultures that revolve around dance clubs and raves. |
Contents
Youth and their Social Spaces | |
ten miles apart on 267 August 1989 1 Five | |
Authenticities from Record Hops to Raves and | |
specifically for the public dancefloor In 1950 | |
death of vinyl as a threat to the value of their record | |
Exploring the Meaning of the Mainstream or | |
The Media Development of Subcultures or | |
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Common terms and phrases
acid house aesthetic album argues artists audience authenticity band Bourdieu Britain British youth club cultures clubbers and ravers clubs and raves consumption cultural capital dance clubs dance crowds dance music dancefloor dancehall dancers disc cultures disc jockey disco discotheques discourses distinction drugs example fanzines flyers format Frith genres gigs Hebdige house music ideologies leisure live music London magazines mainstream mass media McRobbie Mecca Melody Maker Mintel moral panic Mungham music culture musicians Northern Soul particular performance played pop music popular culture popular music production promote radio rave culture record companies record hops record industry Record Mirror recorded music rock rock’n’roll scene sexuality Sharon and Tracy social groups social world sound space Stock/Aitken/Waterman studies style subcultural capital tabloids taste techno television tend twelve-inch underground Union Report venues working-class young youth culture youth subcultures