Pop music is an important symbolic good, the advent of which in the 1950s and 1960s is not well understood. In this article I argue that this is due to the fact that its consumption is not usually analyzed. I therefore analyze survey and group interviews material to argue that pop music was not just an instrument in conflict between generations, but that it increasingly came to be associated with socio-cultural meanings such as success, independence and sexuality. In understanding the life world of consumers of pop music, I find that it is essential to know whom it represents but also what it represents
markdownabstractThis thesis explores the affordances of repackaged popular music from the past. Part...
Critics and fans alike have traditionally viewed popular music, especially in terms of its rock‘n’ro...
Abstract. In this paper we contribute to current debates concerning the relationship between identit...
Pop music is an important symbolic good, the advent of which in the 1950s and 1960s is not well unde...
By consuming pop music, people want to express who they are, to which group they belong, what their ...
Conventional historians often overlook the role of popular music in their interpretations of the pas...
Critics and fans alike have traditionally viewed popular music, especially in terms of its rock'n'ro...
This thesis focuses on the British music scene in the 1960s. Popular music was one of the main manif...
In 2016, the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the singer and songwriter Bob Dylan “for havin...
The consumption of music has long been of interest to sociologists, not only as a universally signif...
Symbolic interactionists Kenneth Burke1 and Hugh Duncan2 have stressed that social interaction is no...
Prior to the 1980s it was uncommon for marketers to incorporate pre-existing popular music into tele...
The article begins by outlining a dominant conception of these relations in sociologically informed ...
Setting its discussion in the wider context of the decline of institutional religion among young adu...
Commentators are unanimous about the important role of the UK in the 1970s in the history of popular...
markdownabstractThis thesis explores the affordances of repackaged popular music from the past. Part...
Critics and fans alike have traditionally viewed popular music, especially in terms of its rock‘n’ro...
Abstract. In this paper we contribute to current debates concerning the relationship between identit...
Pop music is an important symbolic good, the advent of which in the 1950s and 1960s is not well unde...
By consuming pop music, people want to express who they are, to which group they belong, what their ...
Conventional historians often overlook the role of popular music in their interpretations of the pas...
Critics and fans alike have traditionally viewed popular music, especially in terms of its rock'n'ro...
This thesis focuses on the British music scene in the 1960s. Popular music was one of the main manif...
In 2016, the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to the singer and songwriter Bob Dylan “for havin...
The consumption of music has long been of interest to sociologists, not only as a universally signif...
Symbolic interactionists Kenneth Burke1 and Hugh Duncan2 have stressed that social interaction is no...
Prior to the 1980s it was uncommon for marketers to incorporate pre-existing popular music into tele...
The article begins by outlining a dominant conception of these relations in sociologically informed ...
Setting its discussion in the wider context of the decline of institutional religion among young adu...
Commentators are unanimous about the important role of the UK in the 1970s in the history of popular...
markdownabstractThis thesis explores the affordances of repackaged popular music from the past. Part...
Critics and fans alike have traditionally viewed popular music, especially in terms of its rock‘n’ro...
Abstract. In this paper we contribute to current debates concerning the relationship between identit...