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Extreme metal--one step beyond heavy metal--can appear bizarre or
terrifying to the uninitiated. Musicians of this genre have
developed an often impenetrable sound that teeters on the edge of
screaming, incomprehensible noise. Extreme metal circulates on the
edge of mainstream culture within the confines of an obscure
'scene', in which members explore dangerous themes such as death,
war and the occult, sometimes embracing violence, neo-fascism and
Satanism. In the first book-length study of extreme metal, Keith
Kahn-Harris draws on first-hand research to explore the global
extreme metal scene. He shows how the scene is a space in which
members creatively explore destructive themes, but also a space in
which members experience the everyday pleasures of community and
friendship. Including interviews with band members and fans, from
countries ranging from the UK and US to Israel and Sweden, Extreme
Metal: Music and Culture on the Edge demonstrates the power and
subtlety of an often surprising and misunderstood musical form.
This book contains a compelling discussion of transformations
within British Jewry in recent times. The first study of
contemporary British Jewry since the 1970s, "Turbulent Times: The
British Jewish Community Today" examines the changing nature of the
British Jewish community and its leadership since 1990. Keith
Kahn-Harris and Ben Gidley contend that there has been a shift
within Jewish communal discourse from a strategy of security, which
emphasized Anglo-Jewry's secure British belonging and citizenship,
to a strategy of insecurity, which emphasizes the dangers and
threats Jews face individually and communally.
This book defines the key ideas, scholarly debates, and research
activities that have contributed to the formation of the
international and interdisciplinary field of Metal Studies. Drawing
on insights from a wide range of disciplines including popular
music, cultural studies, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and
ethics, this volume offers new and innovative research on metal
musicology, global/local scenes studies, fandom, gender and metal
identity, metal media, and commerce. Offering a wide-ranging focus
on bands, scenes, periods, and sounds, contributors explore topics
such as the riff-based song writing of classic heavy metal bands
and their modern equivalents, and the musical-aesthetics of
Grindcore, Doom metal, Death metal, and Progressive metal. They
interrogate production technologies, sound engineering, album
artwork and band promotion, logos and merchandising, t-shirt and
jewellery design, and fan communities that define the global metal
music economy and subcultural scene. The volume explores how the
new academic discipline of metal studies was formed, also looking
forward to the future of metal music and its relationship to metal
scholarship and fandom. With an international range of
contributors, this volume will appeal to scholars of popular music,
cultural studies, and sociology, as well as those interested in
metal communities around the world.
It is common to hear heavy metal music fans and musicians talk
about the "metal community". This concept, which is widely used
when referencing this musical genre, encompasses multiple complex
aspects that are seldom addressed in traditional academic endeavors
including shared aesthetics, musical practices, geographies, and
narratives. The idea of a "metal community" recognizes that fans
and musicians frequently identify as part of a collective group,
larger than any particular individual. Still, when examined in
detail, the idea raises more questions than answers. What criteria
are used to define groups of people as part of the community? How
are metal communities formed and maintained through time? How do
metal communities interact with local cultures throughout the
world? How will metal communities change over the lifespan of their
members? Are metal communities even possible in light of the
importance placed on individualism in this musical genre? These are
just some of the questions that arise when the concept of
"community" is used in relation to heavy metal music. And yet in
the face of all these complexities, heavy metal fans continue to
think of themselves as a unified collective entity. This book
addresses this notion of "metal community" via the experiences of
authors and fans through theoretical reflections and empirical
research. Their contributions focus on how metal communities are
conceptualized, created, shaped, maintained, interact with their
context, and address internal tensions. The book provides scholars,
and other interested in the field of metal music studies, with a
state of the art reflection on how metal communities are
constituted, while also addressing their limits and future
challenges.
This book defines the key ideas, scholarly debates, and research
activities that have contributed to the formation of the
international and interdisciplinary field of Metal Studies. Drawing
on insights from a wide range of disciplines including popular
music, cultural studies, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and
ethics, this volume offers new and innovative research on metal
musicology, global/local scenes studies, fandom, gender and metal
identity, metal media, and commerce. Offering a wide-ranging focus
on bands, scenes, periods, and sounds, contributors explore topics
such as the riff-based song writing of classic heavy metal bands
and their modern equivalents, and the musical-aesthetics of
Grindcore, Doom metal, Death metal, and Progressive metal. They
interrogate production technologies, sound engineering, album
artwork and band promotion, logos and merchandising, t-shirt and
jewellery design, and fan communities that define the global metal
music economy and subcultural scene. The volume explores how the
new academic discipline of metal studies was formed, also looking
forward to the future of metal music and its relationship to metal
scholarship and fandom. With an international range of
contributors, this volume will appeal to scholars of popular music,
cultural studies, and sociology, as well as those interested in
metal communities around the world.
Defining 'Australian metal' is a challenge for scene members and
researchers alike. Australian metal has long been situated in a
complex relationship between local and global trends, where the
geographic distance between Australia and metal music's seemingly
traditional centres in the United States and United Kingdom have
meant that metal in Australia has been isolated from international
scenes. While numerous metal scenes exist throughout the country,
'Australian metal' itself, as a style, as a sound, and as a
signifier, is a term which cannot be easily defined. This book
considers the multiple ways in which 'Australianness' has been
experienced, imagined, and contested throughout historical periods,
within particular subgenres, and across localised metal scenes. In
doing so, the collection not only explores what can be meant by
Australian metal, but what can be meant by 'Australian' more
generally. With chapters from researchers and practitioners across
Australia, each chapter maps the distinct ways in which
'Australianness' has been grappled with in the identities, scenes,
and cultures of heavy metal in the country. Authors address the
question of whether there is anything particularly 'Australian'
about Australian metal music, finding that often the
'Australianness' of Australian metal is articulated through wider,
mythologised archetypes of national identity. However, this
collection also reveals how Australianness can manifest in metal in
ways that can challenge stereotypical imaginings of national
identity, and assert new modes of being metal 'downungerground'.
It is common to hear heavy metal music fans and musicians talk
about the "metal community". This concept, which is widely used
when referencing this musical genre, encompasses multiple complex
aspects that are seldom addressed in traditional academic endeavors
including shared aesthetics, musical practices, geographies, and
narratives. The idea of a "metal community" recognizes that fans
and musicians frequently identify as part of a collective group,
larger than any particular individual. Still, when examined in
detail, the idea raises more questions than answers. What criteria
are used to define groups of people as part of the community? How
are metal communities formed and maintained through time? How do
metal communities interact with local cultures throughout the
world? How will metal communities change over the lifespan of their
members? Are metal communities even possible in light of the
importance placed on individualism in this musical genre? These are
just some of the questions that arise when the concept of
"community" is used in relation to heavy metal music. And yet in
the face of all these complexities, heavy metal fans continue to
think of themselves as a unified collective entity. This book
addresses this notion of "metal community" via the experiences of
authors and fans through theoretical reflections and empirical
research. Their contributions focus on how metal communities are
conceptualized, created, shaped, maintained, interact with their
context, and address internal tensions. The book provides scholars,
and other interested in the field of metal music studies, with a
state of the art reflection on how metal communities are
constituted, while also addressing their limits and future
challenges.
When released in 2003, The Room, an obscure, self-financed
relationship drama by an eccentric self-taught filmmaker named
Tommy Wiseau, should have been completely forgotten. Yet nearly two
decades later, "the worst movie ever made"—as many a critic would
have it—has become the most popular cult film since The Rocky
Horror Picture Show. In You Are Tearing Me Apart, Lisa!,
contributors explore this priceless cultural artifact, offering
fans and film buffs critical insight into the movie's various
meanings, historical context, and place in the cult canon. Even if
by complete accident, The Room touches on many issues of modern
concern, including sincerity, authenticity, badness, artistic
value, gender relations, Americanness, Hollywood conventions,
masculinity, and even the meaning of life. Revealing the timeless,
infamous power of Wiseau's The Room, You Are Tearing Me Apart,
Lisa! is a deeply entertaining deconstruction of an original work
of all-American failure.
The Israel Conflict in the Jewish Community.
When released in 2003, The Room, an obscure, self-financed
relationship drama by an eccentric self-taught filmmaker named
Tommy Wiseau, should have been completely forgotten. Yet nearly two
decades later, "the worst movie ever made"—as many a critic would
have it—has become the most popular cult film since The Rocky
Horror Picture Show. In You Are Tearing Me Apart, Lisa!,
contributors explore this priceless cultural artifact, offering
fans and film buffs critical insight into the movie's various
meanings, historical context, and place in the cult canon. Even if
by complete accident, The Room touches on many issues of modern
concern, including sincerity, authenticity, badness, artistic
value, gender relations, Americanness, Hollywood conventions,
masculinity, and even the meaning of life. Revealing the timeless,
infamous power of Wiseau's The Room, You Are Tearing Me Apart,
Lisa! is a deeply entertaining deconstruction of an original work
of all-American failure.
I want to show what denialism seeks to prevent; the exposure of
dark desire. It is only when we look directly at this darkness that
we can truly grasp why it is so unspeakable.' The Holocaust never
happened. The planet isn't warming. Vaccines harm children. There
is no such thing as AIDS. The Earth is flat. Denialism comes in
many forms, often dressed in the garb of scholarship or research.
It's certainly insidious and pernicious. Climate change denialists
have built well-funded institutions and lobbying groups to counter
action against global warming. Holocaust deniers have harried
historians and abused survivors. AIDS denialists have prevented
treatment programmes in Africa. All this is bad enough, but what
if, as Keith Kahn-Harris asks, it actually cloaks much darker,
unspeakable, desires? If denialists could speak from the heart,
what would we hear? Kahn-Harris sets out not to unpick denialists'
arguments, but to investigate what lies behind them. The
conclusions he reaches are shocking and uncomfortable. In a world
of `fake news' and `post-truth', are the denialists about to secure
victory?
Heavy metal is now over 40 years old. It emerged at the tail end of
the 1960s in the work of bands including Iron Butterfly, Vanilla
Fudge, Jimi Hendrix, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and - most
importantly - Black Sabbath. In the 1970s and early 1980s, heavy
metal crystallised as a genre as bands such as Judas Priest and
Iron Maiden removed most of the blues influence on the genre,
codifying a set of basic metal characteristics that endure to this
day: distorted guitars, aggressive vocals, denim, leather and
spikes. In broad terms, wherever it is found and however it is
played, metal tends to be dominated by a distinctive commitment to
'transgressive' themes and musicality causing it to be frequently
seen as controversial music. Controversies surrounding the alleged
(and often documented) connection between heavy metal and,
variously, sexual promiscuity, occultism and Satanism, subliminal
messages, suicide and violence have all made heavy metal a target
of moral panics over popular culture. Metal has variously embraced,
rejected, played with and tried to ignore this controversy. At
times, the controversy dies down and the previously transgressive
becomes relatively harmless - as in the transformation of Ozzy
Osbourne from public enemy to loveable dad. Still, metal remains
irrevocably marked by its controversial, transgressive tendencies.
Indeed, the various moral panics that metal has been subjected to
are not only constitutive, at least in part, of metal scenes, but
are encoded in metal's transgression itself. As with hiphop's
"ghetto" roots, metal's history of extreme sonic, lyrical and
visual messages continue to give it credibility with new
generations of fans today. The aim of this anthology is to analyse
the relationship between heavy metal and society within a global
context. It provides a thorough investigation of how and why metal
becomes controversial, how metal 'scenes' are formed and examines
the relationship between metal and society, including how fans,
musicians and the media create the culture of heavy metal.
This is a compelling discussion of transformations within British
Jewry in the recent times. The first study of contemporary British
Jewry since the 1970s, "Turbulent Times: The British Jewish
Community Today" examines the changing nature of the British Jewish
community and its leadership since 1990. Keith Kahn-Harris and Ben
Gidley contend that there has been a shift within Jewish communal
discourse from a strategy of security, which emphasized
Anglo-Jewry's secure British belonging and citizenship, to a
strategy of insecurity, which emphasizes the dangers and threats
Jews face individually and communally. Addressing key questions on
the transitions in the history of Anglo-Jewish community and
leadership, and tackling the concept of the new anti-Semitism, this
important and timely study addresses the question: how has UK Jewry
adapted from a shift from monoculturalism to multiculturalism?
'Quite simply, and quite ridiculously, one of the funniest and most
illuminating books I have ever read. I thought I was obsessive, but
Keith Kahn-Harris is playing a very different sport. He really has
discovered the whole world in an egg.' Simon Garfield 'There is a
delicious humour implicit in every page . . . [the book] is filled
with a sense of wonder, gazing at languages that neither the writer
nor reader understands . . . The Babel Message was such fun that I
even went out and bought a Kinder Surprise Egg.' - Mark Forsyth,
The Spectator A thrilling journey deep into the heart of language,
from a rather unexpected starting point. Keith Kahn-Harris is a man
obsessed with something seemingly trivial - the warning message
found inside Kinder Surprise eggs: WARNING, read and keep: Toy not
suitable for children under 3 years. Small parts might be swallowed
or inhaled. On a tiny sheet of paper, this message is translated
into dozens of languages - the world boiled down to a multilingual
essence. Inspired by this, the author asks: what makes 'a
language'? With the help of the international community of language
geeks, he shows us what the message looks like in Ancient Sumerian,
Zulu, Cornish, Klingon - and many more. Along the way he considers
why Hungarian writing looks angry, how to make up your own
language, and the meaning of the heavy metal umlaut. Overturning
the Babel myth, he argues that the messy diversity of language
shouldn't be a source of conflict, but of collective wonder. This
is a book about hope, a love letter to language. 'This is a
wonderful book. A treasure trove of mind-expanding insights into
language and humanity encased in a deliciously quirky, quixotic
quest. I loved it. Warning: this will keep you reading.' - Ann
Morgan, author of Reading the World: Confessions of a Literary
Explorer
'Quite simply, and quite ridiculously, one of the funniest and most
illuminating books I have ever read. I thought I was obsessive, but
Keith Kahn-Harris is playing a very different sport. He really has
discovered the whole world in an egg.' Simon Garfield 'There is a
delicious humour implicit in every page . . . [the book] is filled
with a sense of wonder, gazing at languages that neither the writer
nor reader understands . . . The Babel Message was such fun that I
even went out and bought a Kinder Surprise Egg.' - Mark Forsyth,
The Spectator A thrilling journey deep into the heart of language,
from a rather unexpected starting point. Keith Kahn-Harris is a man
obsessed with something seemingly trivial - the warning message
found inside Kinder Surprise eggs: WARNING, read and keep: Toy not
suitable for children under 3 years. Small parts might be swallowed
or inhaled. On a tiny sheet of paper, this message is translated
into dozens of languages - the world boiled down to a multilingual
essence. Inspired by this, the author asks: what makes 'a
language'? With the help of the international community of language
geeks, he shows us what the message looks like in Ancient Sumerian,
Zulu, Cornish, Klingon - and many more. Along the way he considers
why Hungarian writing looks angry, how to make up your own
language, and the meaning of the heavy metal umlaut. Overturning
the Babel myth, he argues that the messy diversity of language
shouldn't be a source of conflict, but of collective wonder. This
is a book about hope, a love letter to language. 'This is a
wonderful book. A treasure trove of mind-expanding insights into
language and humanity encased in a deliciously quirky, quixotic
quest. I loved it. Warning: this will keep you reading.' - Ann
Morgan, author of Reading the World: Confessions of a Literary
Explorer
Heavy metal is now over 40 years old. It emerged at the tail end of
the 1960s in the work of bands including Iron Butterfly, Vanilla
Fudge, Jimi Hendrix, Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and - most
importantly - Black Sabbath. In the 1970s and early 1980s, heavy
metal crystallised as a genre as bands such as Judas Priest and
Iron Maiden removed most of the blues influence on the genre,
codifying a set of basic metal characteristics that endure to this
day: distorted guitars, aggressive vocals, denim, leather and
spikes. In broad terms, wherever it is found and however it is
played, metal tends to be dominated by a distinctive commitment to
'transgressive' themes and musicality causing it to be frequently
seen as controversial music. Controversies surrounding the alleged
(and often documented) connection between heavy metal and,
variously, sexual promiscuity, occultism and Satanism, subliminal
messages, suicide and violence have all made heavy metal a target
of moral panics over popular culture. Metal has variously embraced,
rejected, played with and tried to ignore this controversy. At
times, the controversy dies down and the previously transgressive
becomes relatively harmless - as in the transformation of Ozzy
Osbourne from public enemy to loveable dad. Still, metal remains
irrevocably marked by its controversial, transgressive tendencies.
Indeed, the various moral panics that metal has been subjected to
are not only constitutive, at least in part, of metal scenes, but
are encoded in metal's transgression itself. As with hiphop's
"ghetto" roots, metal's history of extreme sonic, lyrical and
visual messages continue to give it credibility with new
generations of fans today. The aim of this anthology is to analyse
the relationship between heavy metal and society within a global
context. It provides a thorough investigation of how and why metal
becomes controversial, how metal 'scenes' are formed and examines
the relationship between metal and society, including how fans,
musicians and the media create the culture of heavy metal.
How did antisemitism get so strange?Life-long anti-racists accused
of antisemitism, life-long Jew haters absolving themselves by
declaring their love of Israel. Today, antisemitism and
philosemitism seem selective, as if Jews offered themselves up as a
kind of buffet, in which non-Jews get to choose the good ones they
like and the bad ones they reject.In this passionate yet
closely-argued polemic from a writer with an intimate knowledge of
the antisemitism controversy, Kahn-Harris argues that the emergence
of a selective anti-racism demonstrates how far we are from
understanding what living in diverse societies really means.Strange
Hate calls for us to abandon selective anti-racism and rethink how
we view not just Jews and antisemitism, but the challenge of living
with diversity.
Music and religion have, throughout history, walked hand in hand.
In the rites and rituals of small tribal religions, great world
religions, and more recent New-Age and neo-heathen movements,
different kinds of music have been used to celebrate the gods,
express belief, and help believers get in contact with the divine.
This innovative book focuses on how mainstream and counter-cultural
groups use religion and music to negotiate the challenges of
modernization and globalization in the European context: a region
under-explored by existing literature on the subject. With its
internal ethnic diversity, ever-expanding borders and increasing
differentiation, Europe has undergone massive dislocation in recent
years. The authors show that, in the midst of such change, rock,
pop, and dance music may in their various forms be used by their
practitioners as resources for new kinds of spiritual and religious
identification, even as these forms are used as symbols of the
deficiencies of secular society. Focusing on Christianity, Judaism,
Islam and New Religious Movements, the book explores such topics as
Norwegian Black Metal and Neo-paganism, contemporary Jewish Music
in the UK, the French hip hop scene, the musical thinking of Muslim
convert Cat Stevens/Yusuf Islam and European dance music culture.
It offers an ideal introduction to leading-edge thinking at the
exciting interface of "music and religion."
Extreme metal--one step beyond heavy metal--can appear bizarre or
terrifying to the uninitiated. Extreme metal musicians have
developed an often impenetrable sound that teeters on the edge of
screaming, incomprehensible noise. Extreme metal circulates on the
edge of mainstream culture within the confines of an obscure
'scene', in which members explore dangerous themes such as death,
war and the occult, sometimes embracing violence, neo-fascism and
Satanism. In the first book-length study of extreme metal, Keith
Kahn-Harris draws on first-hand research to explore the global
extreme metal scene. He shows how the scene is a space in which
members creatively explore destructive themes, but also a space in
which members experience the everyday pleasures of community and
friendship.Including interviews with band members and fans, from
countries ranging from the UK and US to Israel and Sweden, Extreme
Metal: Music and Culture on the Edge demonstrates the power and
subtlety of an often surprising and misunderstood musical form.
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