TY - JOUR
T1 - A push and a shove and the land is ours
T2 - Morrissey's counter-hegemonic stance(s) on social class
AU - Power, Martin J.
AU - Dillane, Aileen
AU - Devereux, Eoin
PY - 2012/11
Y1 - 2012/11
N2 - We explore how the singer Morrissey has represented the struggles of the proletariat in creative and provocative ways, inviting a deep textual reading that reveals a complex counter-hegemonic stance on the issue of social class. A champion of the 'Other' in a variety of guises, Morrissey is revealed in this article as a raconteur of the marginalized working class. We illustrate this through a detailed semiotic, musical and contextual reading of one particular song; 'Interesting Drug'. We reveal tensions in Morrissey's representations of the proletariat. Specifically, Morrissey's romantic, nostalgia-laden, oversimplification of the working-class hero of an earlier era seems some distance from the 'real' proletariat struggle for representation in the places that count. However, in providing both collective places and intimate spaces in which to reflect, his music becomes counter-hegemonic as he hands power back to the individual to make the music meaningful in whatever way he or she wishes.
AB - We explore how the singer Morrissey has represented the struggles of the proletariat in creative and provocative ways, inviting a deep textual reading that reveals a complex counter-hegemonic stance on the issue of social class. A champion of the 'Other' in a variety of guises, Morrissey is revealed in this article as a raconteur of the marginalized working class. We illustrate this through a detailed semiotic, musical and contextual reading of one particular song; 'Interesting Drug'. We reveal tensions in Morrissey's representations of the proletariat. Specifically, Morrissey's romantic, nostalgia-laden, oversimplification of the working-class hero of an earlier era seems some distance from the 'real' proletariat struggle for representation in the places that count. However, in providing both collective places and intimate spaces in which to reflect, his music becomes counter-hegemonic as he hands power back to the individual to make the music meaningful in whatever way he or she wishes.
KW - class stigmatisation
KW - counter-hegemonic discourses
KW - Morrissey
KW - neo-liberalism
KW - personal responsibility
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84867207048&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17405904.2012.713207
DO - 10.1080/17405904.2012.713207
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84867207048
SN - 1740-5904
VL - 9
SP - 375
EP - 392
JO - Critical Discourse Studies
JF - Critical Discourse Studies
IS - 4
ER -