‘Stop flexing your roots, man’: Reconversion strategies, consecrated heretics and the violence of UK first-wave punk

The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk’s original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this heavily mediated popular music culture. A reshaping that facilitated an increased reflexivity in these more socially mobile subjects. This is...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inPunk & post-punk Vol. 3; no. 1; pp. 21 - 39
Main Author Branch, Andrew
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol Intellect 01.04.2014
Intellect Ltd
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk’s original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this heavily mediated popular music culture. A reshaping that facilitated an increased reflexivity in these more socially mobile subjects. This is achieved by drawing on both published testimonies and the author’s own empirical research into how former first-wave punks now read their earlier practice. In recognizing first-wave punk’s initial status as a heterodox cultural formation, discursively defined by the modernist aesthetic it laid claim to and by the violence attributed to it in media representations, the article examines the degree to which its practitioners challenged orthodoxy in their desire to consecrate a new field of cultural practice, with its attendant forms of capital. By drawing on a Bourdieusian conceptual framework, the article demonstrates how first-wave punk derived its affective energy from working-class cultures and predicated this modernist aesthetic on the symbolic value it selectively extracted from them. In undertaking such an account, the article suggests that the violence of first-wave punk, symbolic and physical in form, was symptomatic of the divergent classed habitus of its practitioners. It concludes by arguing that in this respect, punk’s opening up of radical space might be read in a more ambivalent light than has hitherto been the case.
AbstractList The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk’s original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this heavily mediated popular music culture. A reshaping that facilitated an increased reflexivity in these more socially mobile subjects. This is achieved by drawing on both published testimonies and the author’s own empirical research into how former first-wave punks now read their earlier practice. In recognizing first-wave punk’s initial status as a heterodox cultural formation, discursively defined by the modernist aesthetic it laid claim to and by the violence attributed to it in media representations, the article examines the degree to which its practitioners challenged orthodoxy in their desire to consecrate a new field of cultural practice, with its attendant forms of capital. By drawing on a Bourdieusian conceptual framework, the article demonstrates how first-wave punk derived its affective energy from working-class cultures and predicated this modernist aesthetic on the symbolic value it selectively extracted from them. In undertaking such an account, the article suggests that the violence of first-wave punk, symbolic and physical in form, was symptomatic of the divergent classed habitus of its practitioners. It concludes by arguing that in this respect, punk’s opening up of radical space might be read in a more ambivalent light than has hitherto been the case.
The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk's original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this heavily mediated popular music culture. A reshaping that facilitated an increased reflexivity in these more socially mobile subjects. This is achieved by drawing on both published testimonies and the author's own empirical research into how former first-wave punks now read their earlier practice. In recognizing first-wave punk's initial status as a heterodox cultural formation, discursively defined by the modernist aesthetic it laid claim to and by the violence attributed to it in media representations, the article examines the degree to which its practitioners challenged orthodoxy in their desire to consecrate a new field of cultural practice, with its attendant forms of capital. By drawing on a Bourdieusian conceptual framework, the article demonstrates how first-wave punk derived its affective energy from working-class cultures and predicated this modernist aesthetic on the symbolic value it selectively extracted from them. In undertaking such an account, the article suggests that the violence of first-wave punk, symbolic and physical in form, was symptomatic of the divergent classed habitus of its practitioners. It concludes by arguing that in this respect, punk's opening up of radical space might be read in a more ambivalent light than has hitherto been the case. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Author Branch, Andrew
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Andrew
  surname: Branch
  fullname: Branch, Andrew
BookMark eNqFkMlOwzAQhi0EEmU5crfElQRPnKQtN4TYBBISy9lynDEYgl1st8CtjwGv1yfBUXtCQpxm0ffPzD9bZN06i4TsAcuBj-rDydS-5DyHvAABa2RQsLLM-JDV66scxiO-SXZDeGaMwZANy4oNyMdi_nUX3YTqDj-MfaSfbuqpdy6GA_oq7WL-fURvUTk7Qx-MszRELyM-GkxAagdUfd3SJ_QYjQpU2pbGJ6Qz4zq0CqnT9OGKauNDzN7lDGl_6w7Z0LILuLuK2-Th7PT-5CK7vjm_PDm-zhSUY8hKhVJpaPS4gmFTVDiq6rJoeFOgbKBpRw1rC1QKxqBrAKnKViZ_TSurWmOFfJvsL-dOvHubYojiOTm0aaWAqi6A85JBoviSUt6F4FELZaKMyW9yazoBTPRfFv3lggsQ_ZeTKvulmnjzKv3nn3y-5I2N2HWo4j-CH0RNlg4
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_1017_S0261143018000107
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright Intellect Ltd 2014
Copyright_xml – notice: Intellect Ltd 2014
DBID AAYXX
CITATION
C18
DOI 10.1386/punk.3.1.21_1
DatabaseName CrossRef
Humanities Index
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
British Humanities Index (BHI)
DatabaseTitleList CrossRef

British Humanities Index (BHI)
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Music
EISSN 2044-3706
EndPage 39
ExternalDocumentID 10_1386_punk_3_1_21_1
punk.3.1.21
Genre Articles
GroupedDBID 0R~
4.4
ABDBF
ACUHS
AFJPN
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
EBS
EJD
H13
HBU
HZ~
IPNFZ
O9-
RG7
RIG
AAYXX
CITATION
C18
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c1491-4ceacf1bf9517b25e85642b3b2eab1bd8b0d2ecc191f611ac4da000bda56fe5e3
ISSN 2044-1983
IngestDate Mon Jun 30 06:20:22 EDT 2025
Thu Apr 24 22:50:25 EDT 2025
Tue Jul 01 03:18:27 EDT 2025
Wed Mar 26 00:38:33 EDT 2025
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 1
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c1491-4ceacf1bf9517b25e85642b3b2eab1bd8b0d2ecc191f611ac4da000bda56fe5e3
Notes ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
PQID 1562133401
PQPubID 2043415
PageCount 19
ParticipantIDs proquest_journals_1562133401
crossref_citationtrail_10_1386_punk_3_1_21_1
crossref_primary_10_1386_punk_3_1_21_1
intellect_primary_10_1386_punk_3_1_21_1
ProviderPackageCode CITATION
AAYXX
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20140401
2014-04-01
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2014-04-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 04
  year: 2014
  text: 20140401
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationPlace Bristol
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Bristol
PublicationTitle Punk & post-punk
PublicationYear 2014
Publisher Intellect
Intellect Ltd
Publisher_xml – name: Intellect
– name: Intellect Ltd
RelatedPersons Bourdieu, Pierre
Deleuze, Gilles
Guattari, Felix
RelatedPersons_xml – fullname: Bourdieu, Pierre
– fullname: Deleuze, Gilles
– fullname: Guattari, Felix
SSID ssj0001707450
Score 1.8696876
Snippet The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk’s original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this...
The article assesses how the reshaping of the habitus of UK punk's original working-class and lower-middle-class practitioners framed their investment in this...
SourceID proquest
crossref
intellect
SourceType Aggregation Database
Enrichment Source
Index Database
Publisher
StartPage 21
SubjectTerms Bourdieu
Bourdieu, Pierre
British music
class
Deleuze and Guattari
Deleuze, Gilles
field
Guattari, Felix
habitus
punk
Punk Rock
Social Classes
Social Identity
social space
Violence
Title ‘Stop flexing your roots, man’: Reconversion strategies, consecrated heretics and the violence of UK first-wave punk
URI https://doi.org/10.1386/punk.3.1.21_1
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1562133401
Volume 3
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1bb9MwFLagfYCXiavYGMgPQB_alPiSS3nbYNXEpoFEI_XNsh1HmkBpRbNN7Nfv2HEuU7m_RInjNk7OZ_s79rkg9AoYcBpJngaymEUBV2oWAI-Dy1wqreM8ibWL9nkWH2f84zJadumtnHdJpab6-qd-Jf8jVSgDuVov2X-QbPunUADnIF84goTh-Fcyfk2TL9VqPS5sVEtQ-X_Aj8ZAhSsnHLe2mdQWb8643K2MjTdVEx3CVtLWmlrbkhxIo3Np3LRWlZfeJ8kyyuxkXJwDVQyubL6i9UX5tc9rP8O1Q9F6BVXau_VmfVmnm-rZTvplBtK3TnGqZ-PU0rM2gjGKhpwHZFbnopmarowlYdwfZNkWlpoBszf11mGNtgZ15vaYbNOnbAo6PRGkm72aHfuzT2KenZ6KxdFycRcNKWgNdICGB4cfDufdolsCjMll7W0b7uOuwjPe3nrCLZ5y77x5_a0p2_GQxQO04xUIfFCj4SG6Y8pHaOjSdT9G1cjiAXs8YIsH7PAwwYCG0TvcRwLukDDBPRzgBgcYcIABB7jBAV4VODvBHQ6wfZknKJsfLd4fBz6vRqBBHyYB1zDbFkRB7ySJopFJI9BCFVPUSEVUnqowp9C1QZUvYkKk5rmEj6dyGcWFiQx7igblqjTPECbSSEl1bKRhPDFhqmTKqUmMlnCu1S6aNF9RaB903uY--SbcTmoaC9tOwQQR9qPvojdt9XUdbeVXFUetSP5Uc78RmPBddyMIsH7CGA_J3u9vP0f3u86wjwbV9wvzAlhopV56bN0AUTCM-Q
linkProvider EBSCOhost
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=%27Stop+flexing+your+roots%2C+man%27%3A+Reconversion+strategies%2C+consecrated+heretics+and+the+violence+of+UK+first-wave+punk&rft.jtitle=Punk+%26+post-punk&rft.au=Branch%2C+Andrew&rft.date=2014-04-01&rft.pub=Intellect+Ltd&rft.issn=2044-1983&rft.eissn=2044-3706&rft.volume=3&rft.issue=1&rft.spage=21&rft.epage=39&rft_id=info:doi/10.1386%2Fpunk.3.1.21_1&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=2044-1983&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=2044-1983&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=2044-1983&client=summon