Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation
Author(s): David A. Ensminger (Author)
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication Date: June 16, 2011
Language: English
Print length: 336 pages
ISBN-10: 1617030732
ISBN-13: 9781617030734
Book Description
Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation is a vibrant, in-depth, and visually appealing history of punk, which reveals punk concert flyers as urban folk art. David Ensminger exposes the movement’s deeply participatory street art, including flyers, stencils, and graffiti. This discovery leads him to an examination of the often-overlooked presence of African Americans, Latinos, women, and gays and lesbians who have widely impacted the worldviews and music of this subculture. Then Ensminger, the former editor of fanzine Left of the Dial, looks at how mainstream and punk media shape the public’s outlook on the music’s history and significance.
Often derided as litter or a nuisance, punk posters have been called instant art, Xerox art, or DIY street art. For marginalized communities, they carve out spaces for resistance. Made by hand in a vernacular tradition, this art highlights deep-seated tendencies among musicians and fans. Instead of presenting punk as a predominately middle-class, white-male phenomenon, the book describes a convergence culture that mixes people, gender, and sexualities.
This detailed account reveals how members conceptualize their attitudes, express their aesthetics, and talk to each other about complicated issues. Ensminger incorporates an important array of scholarship, ranging from sociology and feminism to musicology and folklore, in an accessible style. Grounded in fieldwork, Visual Vitriol includes over a dozen interviews completed over the last several years with some of the most recognized and important members of groups such as Minor Threat, The Minutemen, The Dils, Chelsea, Membranes, 999, Youth Brigade, Black Flag, Pere Ubu, the Descendents, the Buzzcocks, and others.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Visual Vitriol is a wide-ranging and open-eyed study that expands and complicates that standard narrative of punk. Ensminger’s writing combines the restless energy of a fan with that careful analysis of a scholar. Packed with information, Visual Vitriol will be a valuable resource for cultural historians as well as the next generation of noisemakers and troublemakers. It should also give the experts plenty to argue over. — Al Larsen, media artist working in performance, sound, and physical computing, and adjunct professor in the Department of Media Study, SUNY Buffalo
Ensminger’s book represents the best of the 21st-century approaches to folklore with a lyrical and poignant ethnography that seamlessly interweaves DIY art, first-person experiences, and interviews to create a vivid picture of the powerful cultural tradition we generally think of as ‘punk.’ It is required reading for anyone interested in the dynamic life of the punk movement as well as those considering the intersections of media and everyday life more generally. — Robert Glenn Howard, author of Digital Jesus: The Making of a New Christian Fundamentalist Community on the Internet
This masterful study is the definitive book on the legacy of punk street art?the flyers, posters, stencils, graffiti, and gritty do-it-yourself visual culture of punk?analyzed as an urban folk art phenomenon. Ensminger writes with passion, expertise, and a poetic understanding of punk expression, based on his extensive involvement in punk culture. Infused with cultural theory and a street-level folkloric approach, this insightful volume illuminates the raw and unruly creativity of punk, in its wildly diverse manifestations, as understood from the perspective of punks themselves. — Daniel Wojcik, author of Punk and Neo-Tribal Body Art
Book Description
How the punk scene’s do-it-yourself flyers and posters create a lens into the pounding heart of the music and movement
From the Inside Flap
How the punk scene’s do-it-yourself flyers and posters create a lens into the pounding heart of the music and movement
From the Back Cover
How the punk scene’s do-it-yourself flyers and posters create a lens into the pounding heart of the music and movement
About the Author
David A. Ensminger is a college instructor of English, humanities, and folklore in Texas; a drummer with decades behind the kit; and an author of several books covering both American roots music and punk rock history, including Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation, published by University Press of Mississippi. He is also an ongoing contributor to magazines in America and Europe, such as Razorcake, Maximum Rocknroll, Trust, and Zap. And, he has been interviewed by The Economist and the Boston Globe.