Cold World Previews
Tuesday, September 29th, 2009Regular extracts from Cold World at Dominic Fox’s Poetix.
Regular extracts from Cold World at Dominic Fox’s Poetix.
The essays in The Resistible Demise Of Michael Jackson consummately demonstrate that writing on popular culture can be both thoughtful and heartfelt. The contributors, who include accomplished music critics as well as renowned theorists, are some of the most astute and eloquent writers on pop today. The collection is made up of new essays written in the wake of Jackson’s death, but also includes Barney Hoskyns’ classic NME piece written at the time of Thriller.
Contributors include: Barney Hoskyns, Ian Penman, David Stubbs, Steven Shaviro, Joshua Clover, Ken Hollings, Mark Sinker, Geeta Dayal, Kodwo Eshun, Sam Davies, Tom Ewing, Owen Hatherley, Jeremy Gilbert, Suhail Malik, Marcello Carlin, Alex Williams, Dominic Fox
Mark Fisher is highly respected both as a music journalist and a cultural theorist. His work appears regularly in The Wire, frieze, Sight & Sound and New Statesman. He is a Visiting Fellow at the Centre For Cultural Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London and his site k-punk is one of the most successful and widely read theory weblogs.
Publication date: December 2009 Press enquiries: zerobooks@hotmail.com
Dominic Fox elaborates some more on Militant Dysphoria and the Cold World at Poetix.
Two forum discussions of David Stubbs’ Fear of Music – at When Saturday Comes and a more argumentative Dissensus.
In a similar vein: Owen Hatherley defends blogs, against a slagging of the blog-becomes-book format from Stephen Howe – which then received a surprisingly sympathetic response.
Zer0 is now twittering here…
Jonathan Meades reviews Militant Modernism.