Skip to main content

Spinning Popular Culture as Public Pedagogy

Critical Reflections and Transformative Possibilities

  • Book
  • © 2017

Overview

  • This volume contains specific instances of the ways in which nostalgia, memory and critical analysis can be worked together to expose the hegemonizing effects of popular culture, as well as demonstrating the resistive potential in interrogating such cultural items
  • Exemplars of critical analyses of everyday items for possible use in classroom teaching (at school and, particularly, university level) are not common in the teacher education and arts-related textbook areas
  • The volume reflects perspectives from a diverse range of academic/educational disciplinary areas, with the contributors working across areas of cultural studies, teacher education, curriculum theory, science, formal, informal, practitioner-oriented, and theoretician-oriented spaces
  • Public pedagogy is considered from a much earlier use of the term, and not necessarily only from the post-1975 cultural studies turn in the area

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this book

eBook USD 39.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access

Licence this eBook for your library

Institutional subscriptions

Table of contents (12 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

"Spinning Popular Culture is a book about the effervescent activity lying (perhaps dormant) beneath the surface of seemingly inert and mundane cultural items in everyday life. It is a book about the power of the Everyday to maintain loyalty to or, at the very least, an unthinking acceptance of particular ways of being in the world. It is also about the capacity of such seemingly mundane artefacts to provoke resistance to this, and to enliven the visioning of social alternatives. It is a book about individual critical analyses of album cover art.
Following a brief history of the development of the aesthetics of the packaging of recorded music, eleven internationally recognised critical scholars each interrogate the cover of a particular vinyl record album they grew up with or with which they have some personal experience or resonance. The totality of the cultural artefact that is the vinyl record album is, essentially, dissected and considered from perspectives of paratextuality and pedagogy.
In this book, the contributors make the connections of everyday life to memory and history by locating the album in their personal biographies. They then look to the artwork on the album cover to explore the pedagogical possibilities they see resident there. The individual chapters, each in very different ways, provide examples of the exposure of such broad public pedagogies in practice, through critiquing the artwork from both reproductive and resistance positions.
Hopefully, readers will be encouraged to look more consciously at the Everyday – the mundane and the taken-for-granted – in their own lives with a view to becoming more critically aware of the messages circulating, unnoticed, through popular culture. Spinning Popular Culture might also encourage the reader to pull out that box of old vinyl records sitting in the back of a storage cupboard somewhere and revisit and rethink their histories. Or maybe, to just find a turntable somewhereand play them one more time!"


Editors and Affiliations

  • University of Southern Queensland, Australia

    Jon Austin

Bibliographic Information

Publish with us