During the mid-1960s, a small group of young journalists made it
their mission to write about popular music, especially rock, as
something worthy of serious intellectual scrutiny. Their efforts
not only transformed the perspective on the era's music but
revolutionized how Americans have come to think, talk, and write
about popular music ever since.
In Writing the Record, Devon Powers explores this shift by
focusing on The Village Voice, a key publication in the rise of
rock criticism. Revisiting the work of early pop critics such as
Richard Goldstein and Robert Christgau, Powers shows how they stood
at the front lines of the mass culture debates, challenging old
assumptions and hierarchies and offering pioneering political and
social critiques of the music. Part of a college-educated
generation of journalists, Voice critics explored connections
between rock and contemporary intellectual trends such as
postmodernism, identity politics, and critical theory. In so doing,
they became important forerunners of the academic study of popular
culture that would emerge during the 1970s.
Drawing on archival materials, interviews, and insights from
media and cultural studies, Powers not only narrates a story that
has been long overlooked but also argues that pop music criticism
has been an important channel for the expression of public
intellectualism. This is a history that is particularly relevant
today, given the challenges faced by criticism of all stripes in
our current media environment. Powers makes the case for the value
of well-informed cultural criticism in an age when it is often
suggested that "everyone is a critic."
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