Popular Music and Human Rights: 2 volume set
- Author: Peddie, Ian
Book
$57.25Out of Stock
Contents
- Contents: Foreword
- Introduction
- More relevance than spotlight and applause: Billy Bragg in the British folk tradition, Kieran Cashell
- 'Know your rights': punk rock, globalization and human rights, Kevin C. Dunn
- Unlocking the silence: Tori Amos, sexual violence and affect, Deborah Finding
- Pantomime paranoia in London or, 'look out he's behind you!', John Hutnyk
- The Blues, trauma, and public memory: Willie King and the Liberators, Stephen A. King
- The aesthetic dimension: cultural politics, human rights, and Hedwig, Stefan Mattessich
- The evolution of the political benefit rock album, Neil Nehring
- Which music for which catastrophe? The functions of popular music 21st century benefit concerts, Sam O'Connell
- From midnight music to civil rights, from bluesology to human rights: Gil Scott-Heron, American Griot, Ian Peddie
- Plight of the Redman: XIT, Red power, and the refashioning of American Indian ethnicity, Christopher A. Scales
- 'The country we carry in our hearts is waiting': Bruce Springsteen, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and the search for human rights in America, David Thurmaier
- The vision of possibility: popular music, women and human rights, Sheila Whiteley
- Bibliography
- Discography
- Index.