Subculture: the meaning of style / Dick Hebdige.
Series: New accents | New accents (Methuen & Co.)London: Methuen, 1979Description: viii, 195 pages; 19 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0416708501
- 9780416708509
- 0416708609
- 9780416708608
- 0415039495
- 9780415039499
- Youth -- Great Britain
- Subculture -- Great Britain
- Subculture
- Jeunesse -- Grande Bretagne
- Subculture -- Grande Bretagne
- Subculture
- Subculture
- Youth
- Great Britain
- Jugend
- Jugendkultur
- Subkultur
- Gro britannien
- Freizeit
- Jongeren
- Subcultuur
- Youth -- Great Britain
- Subculture -- Great Britain
- Young persons Subcultures Great Britain, 1945-1978
- 306.1 21
- 301.43/15/0941
- HQ799.G7 H4 1979
- 71.34
- MR 5700
- MS 2350
- Self-Renewing 2017
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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OCLC Data | Available | 0000000004227 |
Errata slip inserted.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Dick Hebdige's Subculture is one of the most influential books in cultural studies to have been published in the last fifty years. Acclaimed by Rolling Stone and The New York Times on its first publication, it is a classic study of youth subcultures and the story of style, from Reggae and Rastafarianism to glam rock and punk. Beginning with an explanation of such contested terms as culture, ideology, hegemony, style and subculture Hebidge also investigates the postwar styles of hipsters, beats, teds, mods, skinheads, rude boys, glam and glitter rockers, punks, and dreads. He also brilliantly analyses different facets of style, especially punk and working-class subculture and explores the commodification and diffusion of style by the media.
Dick Hebdige's Subculture is one of the most influential books in cultural studies to have been published in the last fifty years. Acclaimed by Rolling Stone and The New York Times on its first publication, it is a classic study of youth subcultures and the story of style, from Reggae and Rastafarianism to glam rock and punk. Beginning with an explanation of such contested terms as culture, ideology, hegemony, style and subculture Hebidge also investigates the postwar styles of hipsters, beats, teds, mods, skinheads, rude boys, glam and glitter rockers, punks, and dreads. He also brilliantly analyses different facets of style, especially punk and working-class subculture and explores the commodification and diffusion of style by the media.
Self-Renewing 2017 UoY
NLJCols20082021
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