Routledge, 2002. — 208 p.
General Editor’s Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Subculture and Style
From culture to hegemony
Some case studies
Holiday in the sun: Mister Rotten makes the grade
Boredom in Babylon
Back to Africa
The Rastafarian solution
Reggae and Rastafarianism
Exodus: A double crossing
Hipsters, beats and teddy boys
Home-grown cool: The style of the mods
White skins, black masks
Glam and glitter rock: Albino camp and
other diversions
Bleached roots: Punks and white ‘ethnicity’
The function of subculture
Specificity: Two types of teddy boy
The sources of style
Subculture: The unnatural break
Two forms of incorporation
Style as intentional communication
Style as bricolage
Style in revolt: Revolting style
Style as homology
Style as signifying practice
O.K., it’s Culture, but is it Art?
Suggested Further Reading