
In March 1977, John Johnny Rotten Lydon Of The Punk Band The Sex Pistols Looked Over The Berlin Wall Onto The Grey, Militarized Landscape Of East Berlin, Which Reminded Him Of Home In London. Lydon Went Up To The Wall And Extended His Middle Finger. He Didn't Know It At The Time, But The Sex Pistols' Reputation Had Preceded His Gesture, As Young People In The Second World Busily Appropriated News Reports On Degenerate Western Culture As Punk Instruction Manuals. Soon After, Burgeoning Polish Punk Impresario Henryk Gajewski Brought The London Punk Band The Raincoats To Perform At His Art Gallery And Student Club-the Epicenter For Warsaw's Nascent Punk Scene. When The Raincoats Returned To England, They Found London Erupting At The Rock Against Racism Concert, Which Brought Together 100,000 First World Uk Punks And Third World Caribbean Immigrants Who Contributed Their Cultures Of Reggae And Rastafarianism. Punk Had Formed Networks Reaching Across All Three Of The Cold War's Worlds. The First Global Narrative Of Punk, Punk Crisis Examines How Transnational Punk Movements Challenged The Global Order Of The Cold War, Blurring The Boundaries Between East And West, North And South, Communism And Capitalism Through Performances Of Creative Dissent. As Author Raymond A. Patton Argues, Punk Eroded The Boundaries And Political Categories That Defined The Cold War Era, Replacing Them With A New Framework Based On Identity As Conservative Or Progressive. Through This Paradigm Shift, Punk Unwittingly Ushered In A New Era Of Global Neoliberalism.
How did the transnational punk movement challenge the geopolitical boundaries and ideological categories of the Cold War era? Raymond A. Patton, a scholar of modern history, utilizes a global framework to analyze punk as a catalyst for political and social change. He argues that punk performances of creative dissent eroded the rigid divisions between East and West, ultimately facilitating a shift toward a new era of global neoliberalism defined by identity-based politics.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of subcultures within a geopolitical context. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the prose and the author's ability to synthesize disparate global movements into a cohesive historical argument.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190872373
ISBN-13:
9780190872373
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