2017
DOI: 10.1080/10304312.2017.1370538
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‘We love the bands and we want to keep them on the walls’: gig posters as heritage-as-praxis in music venues

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The shabbiness and materialized cultural heritage of the place strengthen the alternative cultural dimensions of livehouses. Strong and Whiting (2018) have examined the role of posters in music venues as a form of heritage-as-praxis that create a sense of identity and community. Posters, stickers, CDs, vinyl, and graffiti on the walls of livehouses are all material items perceived by livehouse audiences as cultural affordance (see Figure 3).…”
Section: Cultural Variety In International Shanghaimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The shabbiness and materialized cultural heritage of the place strengthen the alternative cultural dimensions of livehouses. Strong and Whiting (2018) have examined the role of posters in music venues as a form of heritage-as-praxis that create a sense of identity and community. Posters, stickers, CDs, vinyl, and graffiti on the walls of livehouses are all material items perceived by livehouse audiences as cultural affordance (see Figure 3).…”
Section: Cultural Variety In International Shanghaimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This 'privileged' cultural capital is reified in the bricks-and-mortar of the venue as a kind of 'materialist' symbolic capital. Although previous work has been done on music posters that are used as décor in venue spaces as a kind of 'heritage-as-praxis' (Strong and Whiting, 2018), the literature is relatively lacking in studies on how Bourdieusian forms of capital are expressed in the material space of venues themselves.…”
Section: Disinterestmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Catherine Strong and Samuel Whiting's research into the cultural aesthetics of Melbourne's live music venues can help to illuminate the motivations of audience members who carry the festival's tote from previous years. 39 Writing about the common practice of music venues keeping old gig posters on the wall, Strong and Whiting observe that these posters "shape notions of musical place and space" and that they establish "a sense of the venues' embeddedness in the collective memory and history of the musical past." 40 I argue that carrying an old festival tote bag echoes this idea, and that this practice establishes the individual in question as someone who embodies and reflects the "notions of … place and space" within the literary field, while simultaneously aligning themselves with and paying homage to the "collective memory" and rich history of these events-a history that includes some of the western literary canon's most revered authors.…”
Section: The Festival Totementioning
confidence: 99%