Protest Music, Art and Literature: Difference between revisions
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Negus, K. (1996). ''Popular Music in Theory: An introduction.'' Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. | Negus, K. (1996). ''Popular Music in Theory: An introduction.'' Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. | ||
Netzley, P. (1999). <u> Social Protest Literature; An Encyclopedia of Works, Characters, Authors, and Themes</u>. ABC-CLIO,<br>: Santa Barbara, California. | |||
Rodnitzky, J.L. (1974). Popular music in American studies. <u> The History Teacher, 7</u>(4), 503-510. | Rodnitzky, J.L. (1974). Popular music in American studies. <u> The History Teacher, 7</u>(4), 503-510. |
Revision as of 03:50, 4 May 2006
Denisoff, S.R. (1969). Folk music and the American Left: A generational-ideological comparison. The British Journal of Sociology, 20(4),
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Denisoff, S.R. (1970). Protest songs: those on the top forty and those of the streets. American Quarterly, 22(4), 807-823.
Denisoff, S.R., & Levine M.H. (1971). The popular protest song: the case of "Eve of Destruction." The Public Opinion Quarterly, 35(1),
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Hebdige, D. (1979). Subculture: The Meaning of Style. London: Methuen.
Lewis, L. (1990) Gender Politics and MTV: Voicing the Difference. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Maultsbury, P.K. (1995). A Map of the music. African American Review, 29(2), 183-184.
Negus, K. (1996). Popular Music in Theory: An introduction. Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press.
Netzley, P. (1999). Social Protest Literature; An Encyclopedia of Works, Characters, Authors, and Themes. ABC-CLIO,
: Santa Barbara, California.
Rodnitzky, J.L. (1974). Popular music in American studies. The History Teacher, 7(4), 503-510.
Williams, R. (1990). Television, Technology and Cultural Form. London: Routledge.