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Articles

Popular Music Fanzines: Genre, Aesthetics, and the “Democratic Conversation”

Pages 517-531 | Published online: 11 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

Research into fanzines has tended to locate them as subcultural artefacts whose significance is found in their symbolic fit with the subculture responsible for producing them. As a consequence, fanzines have mostly been interpreted homologically as acts of political resistance, with little attention being paid to the aesthetic arguments they contain. In contrast, by considering fanzines as types of genre-cultures it becomes possible to examine amateur writing about music not as explicitly oppositional, but as contributions to the critical discourse of popular music. This article explores a single fanzine to examine the ways in which its writers—and the musicians it features—evaluate the music they favor. A genre-culture approach offers insights into the cultural politics of fanzine writing that take into account historically situated and contemporary constructions of genre pleasures.

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