The Connected Lives of Dutch Punks 2017
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-51079-8_3
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Punk Lives On: Generations of Punk and Squatting in the Netherlands

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…A comparative to TV revivals within punk fandom might be reunion gigs by bands, something often viewed too through its relationship to nostalgia. Lohman (2017) in research with aging Dutch punks, for example, comments on the notable trend at the time of her work for punk nostalgia, demonstrated by the organization of reunion gigs and also the re-releasing of old recordings. Furthermore, Adams (2008) provides performances by reformed punk bands as an example of an attempt to recreate the glories of subcultures past, concluding that nostalgia is inevitable as members of a subculture age and, in turn, engage in mundane (adult) lives.…”
Section: Nostalgiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A comparative to TV revivals within punk fandom might be reunion gigs by bands, something often viewed too through its relationship to nostalgia. Lohman (2017) in research with aging Dutch punks, for example, comments on the notable trend at the time of her work for punk nostalgia, demonstrated by the organization of reunion gigs and also the re-releasing of old recordings. Furthermore, Adams (2008) provides performances by reformed punk bands as an example of an attempt to recreate the glories of subcultures past, concluding that nostalgia is inevitable as members of a subculture age and, in turn, engage in mundane (adult) lives.…”
Section: Nostalgiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Punk notoriously resists definition. The sparse but intriguing scholarship on punk space, from restaurants (Clark, 2004) to squats (Lohman, 2017), to zines (Pine, 2006), to music venues (Green, 2018), to everyday spaces and the urban underground (Sonnichsen, 2019) often draw on experiences of punk as political resistance, and as practices of mutual aid and community care. In his reflections on subcultural scenes, Straw (2015, p. 477) proposed to think of subcultural scenes as "ethical worlds shaped by the working out and maintenance of behavioural protocols," and as "spaces of mediation which regulate the visibility and invisibility of cultural life.…”
Section: Punk Space and Intersections With Queer Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%