TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You

$28.50

This eBook provides an educational look into the history of music journalism and its cultural impact.

TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don't Let the Name Fool You
TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You
$28.50

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TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You

$60.27

This book provides a critical examination of music journalism and media history, exploring themes of pop culture, gender, and social commentary.

TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don't Let the Name Fool You
TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You
$60.27

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Since the magazine’s first issue in 1964, TeenSet’s role in popular music journalism has been overlooked and underappreciated. Teen fan magazines, often written by women and assumed to be read only by young girls, have been misconstrued by scholars and journalists to lack “seriousness” in their coverage of popular music. TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You disputes the prevailing conception that teen fan magazines are insignificant and elevates the publications to their proper place in popular music history. Analyzing TeenSet across its five-year publication span, Allison Bumsted shows that the magazine is an important artifact of 1960s American popular culture. Through its critical commentary and iconic rock photography, TeenSet engaged not only with musical genres and scenes, but also broader social issues such as politics, race, and gender. These countercultural discourses have been widely overlooked due to a generalization of teen fan magazines, which have wrongly presumed the magazine to be antithetical to rock music and as unimportant to broader American culture at the time. Bumsted also examines the leadership of editor Judith Sims and female TeenSet staff writers such as Carol Gold. By offering a counternarrative to leading male-oriented narratives in music journalism, she challenges current discourses that have marginalized women in popular music history. Ultimately, the book illustrates that TeenSet and teen fan magazines were meaningful not only to readers, but also to the broader development of the popular music press and 1960s cultural commentary.

Additional information

Weight 0.44 lbs
Dimensions 15.5 × 2 × 23.4 in

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TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You

$30.00

This book provides a critical examination of music journalism and media history, exploring themes of pop culture, gender, and social commentary.

TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don't Let the Name Fool You
TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You
$30.00

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Since the magazine’s first issue in 1964, TeenSet’s role in popular music journalism has been overlooked and underappreciated. Teen fan magazines, often written by women and assumed to be read only by young girls, have been misconstrued by scholars and journalists to lack “seriousness” in their coverage of popular music. TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You disputes the prevailing conception that teen fan magazines are insignificant and elevates the publications to their proper place in popular music history. Analyzing TeenSet across its five-year publication span, Allison Bumsted shows that the magazine is an important artifact of 1960s American popular culture. Through its critical commentary and iconic rock photography, TeenSet engaged not only with musical genres and scenes, but also broader social issues such as politics, race, and gender. These countercultural discourses have been widely overlooked due to a generalization of teen fan magazines, which have wrongly presumed the magazine to be antithetical to rock music and as unimportant to broader American culture at the time. Bumsted also examines the leadership of editor Judith Sims and female TeenSet staff writers such as Carol Gold. By offering a counternarrative to leading male-oriented narratives in music journalism, she challenges current discourses that have marginalized women in popular music history. Ultimately,the bookillustrates that TeenSet and teen fan magazines were meaningful not only to readers, but also to the broader development of the popular music press and 1960s cultural commentary.

Additional information

Weight 0.431 lbs
Dimensions 15.2 × 1.6 × 22.9 in

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “TeenSet, Teen Fan Magazines, and Rock Journalism: Don’t Let the Name Fool You”

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