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Living in The Merry Ghetto

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Living in The Merry Ghetto Synopsis

Living in the Merry Ghetto reframes how people use music to build resistance. Author Trever Hagen addresses the social context of illegal music-making in Czechoslovakia during state socialism. He tells the story of a group of rock'n'roll musicians who went underground after 1968, building a parallel world from where they could flourish: the Merry Ghetto. The book examines the case of the Czech Underground and the politics of their music and their way of life, paying close attention to the development of the ensemble The Plastic People of the Universe. Taking in multiple political transitions from the 1940s-2000s, the story focuses on non-official cultural practices such as listening to foreign radio broadcasts, seeking out copied cassette tapes, listening to banned LPs, growing long hair, attending clandestine concerts, smuggling albums via diplomats, recording in home-studios and being thrown in prison for any of these activities. Drawing on ethnographic interviews with Undergrounders, archival research and participant observation, Hagen shows how these practices shaped consciousness, informed bodies and promoted collective action, all of which contributed to an Underground identity.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780190263867
Publication date:
Author: Trever Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow, Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow, Department of Sociology, Philosophy, Anthrop Hagen
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 208 pages
Genres: Popular music
Cold wars and proxy conflicts
Sociology