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Glitter Up The Dark : how pop music broke the binary / Sasha Geffen.

By: Material type: TextLanguage: English Series: American music series (Austin, Tex.)Publisher: Austin : University of Texas Press, 2020Copyright date: ©2020Edition: First editionDescription: viii, 254 pages 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Audience:
  • General
  • Any audience
ISBN:
  • 9781477318782
Other title:
  • How pop music broke the binary
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 781.64086/7 23
LOC classification:
  • .G44 2020
Contents:
Introduction. An Alternate Ribbon of Time -- Screaming the Beatles: The First Boy Band Breaks the Gender Mold -- Oh! You Pretty Things: The Glitter Revolution -- Whining Is Gender Neutral: Punk's Adolescent Escapism -- Wreckers of Civilization: Post-punk, Goth, and Industrial -- Soft Machines: Women, Cyborgs, and Electronic Music -- Not a Woman, Not a Man: Prince's Sapphic Androgyny -- The Fake Makes It Real: Synthpop and MTV -- Infinite Utopia: Queer Time in Disco and House -- Funky Cyborgs: Time, Technology, and Gender in Hip-Hop -- Butch Throats: Women's Music and Riot Grrrl -- God Is Gay: The Grunge Eruption -- No Shape: The Formless Internet -- Coda. Whole New World.
Summary: "Is our love of pop music innately queer? That's the question Sasha Geffen answers--with a "yes," of course--in this book. Beginning with the Beatles and moving to the present, Geffen identifies artists of all stripes who performed "outside the limitations of their assigned genders." This includes not only trans artists like Wendy Carlos, or openly gender-bending artists like David Bowie and Prince, but ostensibly cis and hetero artists whose work and performance complicate the binary. This musical androgyny, they argue, is the result of different factors at different points in the timeline, but the flexibility of the human voice in pop music emerges as the most consistent form of expression. Geffen continues right up to the present, covering the origins of House and disco in gay clubs and the utopia of the dance floor, the genderless technology of hip-hop and artists like Missy Elliott who embody masculine virtues"--.Summary: "Is our love of pop music innately queer? That's the question Sasha Geffen answers--with a "yes," of course--in this book. Beginning with the Beatles and moving to the present, Geffen identifies artists of all stripes who performed "outside the limitations of their assigned genders." This includes not only trans artists like Wendy Carlos, or openly gender-bending artists like David Bowie and Prince, but ostensibly cis and hetero artists whose work and performance complicate the binary. This musical androgyny, they argue, is the result of different factors at different points in the timeline, but the flexibility of the human voice in pop music emerges as the most consistent form of expression. Geffen continues right up to the present, covering the origins of House and disco in gay clubs and the utopia of the dance floor, the genderless technology of hip-hop and artists like Missy Elliott who embody masculine virtues"-- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Books Idaho Springs Public Library ANF 781.6 GEF (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 30404100262177

Includes index.

Introduction. An Alternate Ribbon of Time -- Screaming the Beatles: The First Boy Band Breaks the Gender Mold -- Oh! You Pretty Things: The Glitter Revolution -- Whining Is Gender Neutral: Punk's Adolescent Escapism -- Wreckers of Civilization: Post-punk, Goth, and Industrial -- Soft Machines: Women, Cyborgs, and Electronic Music -- Not a Woman, Not a Man: Prince's Sapphic Androgyny -- The Fake Makes It Real: Synthpop and MTV -- Infinite Utopia: Queer Time in Disco and House -- Funky Cyborgs: Time, Technology, and Gender in Hip-Hop -- Butch Throats: Women's Music and Riot Grrrl -- God Is Gay: The Grunge Eruption -- No Shape: The Formless Internet -- Coda. Whole New World.

"Is our love of pop music innately queer? That's the question Sasha Geffen answers--with a "yes," of course--in this book. Beginning with the Beatles and moving to the present, Geffen identifies artists of all stripes who performed "outside the limitations of their assigned genders." This includes not only trans artists like Wendy Carlos, or openly gender-bending artists like David Bowie and Prince, but ostensibly cis and hetero artists whose work and performance complicate the binary. This musical androgyny, they argue, is the result of different factors at different points in the timeline, but the flexibility of the human voice in pop music emerges as the most consistent form of expression. Geffen continues right up to the present, covering the origins of House and disco in gay clubs and the utopia of the dance floor, the genderless technology of hip-hop and artists like Missy Elliott who embody masculine virtues"--.

"Is our love of pop music innately queer? That's the question Sasha Geffen answers--with a "yes," of course--in this book. Beginning with the Beatles and moving to the present, Geffen identifies artists of all stripes who performed "outside the limitations of their assigned genders." This includes not only trans artists like Wendy Carlos, or openly gender-bending artists like David Bowie and Prince, but ostensibly cis and hetero artists whose work and performance complicate the binary. This musical androgyny, they argue, is the result of different factors at different points in the timeline, but the flexibility of the human voice in pop music emerges as the most consistent form of expression. Geffen continues right up to the present, covering the origins of House and disco in gay clubs and the utopia of the dance floor, the genderless technology of hip-hop and artists like Missy Elliott who embody masculine virtues"-- Provided by publisher.

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