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Article

‘No more heroes anymore’: Marginalized identities in punk memorialization and curation

Details

Citation

Stewart F (2019) ‘No more heroes anymore’: Marginalized identities in punk memorialization and curation. Punk & Post-Punk, 8 (2), pp. 209-226. https://doi.org/10.1386/punk.8.2.209_1

Abstract
The 40th ‘anniversary’ of punk in 2016 was marked by various events in London including museum exhibits and public talks. Missing from far too many of these events has been the voice and experiences of marginalized punks. Was the subversive nature of punk being undermined by the realities of a display space that must cater to a wide range of users and stakeholders? Or is the inclusive platform that punk sells itself on a well-disguised miasma that arises from its perpetuation of (and belief in) troubling norms such as sexism, ableism, racism and homophobia? This article will argue that it was a combination of both. Utilizing interviews it will demonstrate the impact that the exhibit had on marginalized groups within punk and their reflections on whether it reflects wider norms within punk. Relying on the stranger fetishization theory of Sara Ahmed, this article will examine how punk’s memorialization of itself forces marginalized groups within it to be used as a means of bolstering a particular narrative of inclusivity that in reality ensures that they remain strangers within their own subculture.

Keywords
curation; marginalized voices; museum displays; Northern Ireland; punk memorials; women in punk

Journal
Punk & Post-Punk: Volume 8, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2019
Publication date online01/06/2019
Date accepted by journal28/09/2018
PublisherIntellect
ISSN2044-1983

People (1)

Dr Francis Stewart

Dr Francis Stewart

Lecturer in Sociology (Social Theory), Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology