ARTICLE KNOWLEDGE GRAPH

Analysis of interlinked descriptions of entities - objects, events, situations or abstract concepts – while also encoding the semantics





Id 669
Author Brunow D.
Title Manchesters post-punk heritage: Mobilising and contesting transcultural memory in the context of urban regeneration
Reference

Brunow D.; Manchesters post-punk heritage: Mobilising and contesting transcultural memory in the context of urban regeneration ;Culture Unbound vol:11 issue: 3.0 page:9.0

Keywords Carol Morley; Cultural memory; Manchester; Post-punk; Transcultural memory; Urban reconstruction
Link to article https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85065525858&doi=10.3384%2fcu.2000.1525.20191119&partnerID=40&md5=62fc4e1f85a8676192433363af97ab30
Abstract Urban memories are remediated and mobilised by different - and often conflicting - stakeholders, representing the heritage industry, municipal city branding campaigns or anti-gentrification struggles. Post-punk retromania (Reynolds 2011) coincided with the culture-led regeneration of former industrial cities in the Northwest of England, relaunching the cities as creative clusters (Cohen 2007, Bottà 2009, Roberts & Cohen 2014, Roberts 2014). Drawing on my case study of the memory cultures evolving around Manchesters post-punk era (Brunow 2015), this article shows how narratives and images travel through urban space. Looking at contemporary politics of city branding, it examines the power relations involved in adapting (white homosocial) post-punk memories into the self-fashioning of Manchester as a creative city. Situated at the interface of memory studies and film studies, this article offers an anti-essentialist approach to the notion of transcultural memory. Examining the power relations involved in the construction of audiovisual memories, this article argues that subcultural or popular memories are not emancipatory per se, but can easily tie into neoliberal politics. Moreover, there has been a tendency to sideline or overlook feminist and queer as well as Black and Asian British contributions to post-punk culture. Only partially have such marginalised narratives been observed so far, for instance in Carol Morleys documentary The Alcohol Years (2000) or by the Manchester Digital Music Archive. The article illustrates how different stakeholders invest in subcultural histories, sustaining or contesting hegemonic power relations within memory culture. While being remediated within various transmedia contexts, Manchesters postpunk memories have been sanitised, fabricating consensus instead of celebrating difference. © 2019 Culture Unbound: Journal of Current Cultural Research.

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