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Heavy Music Mothers: Extreme Identities, Narrative Disruptions is
an exploration of women and heavy music and the ways in which women
have historically engaged with musicking as mothers. Julie Turley
and Joan Jocson-Singh, musicking mothers themselves, largely employ
an ethnographic lens, foregrounded in powerful one-on-one original
interviews as vignettes that narrate thematic patterns. Other
chapters examine motherhood identity embedded in respective
published rock music memoirs, discussions of rock performance as a
site of maternal bonding, and themes that arise when heavy music
mothers write about motherhood. Autoethnographic portions
throughout give the book an intimate and personal tone: one such
chapter presents the concept of vigilante motherhood within an
auto-ethnographic context. The authors reference the book’s
limitations, meditating on historically marginalized moms the
authors predict and hope the focus will be on for the future. Heavy
Music Mothers is a robust study of women and motherhood set within
a music culture historically inhospitable to both women and
mothers. This book, the first scholarly study of this topic, is
just the beginning.
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