List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Examples
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Undertaking Music Video Analysis (Lori Burns,
University of Ottawa, Canada, and Stan Hawkins, University of Oslo,
Norway)
Part I: Authorship, Production, and Distribution
1 Changing Dynamics and Diversity in Music Video Production and
Distribution (Mathias Bonde Korsgaard, Aarhus University,
Denmark)
2 Low Budget Audiovisual Aesthetics in Indie Music Video and
Feature Filmmaking: The Works of Steve Hanft and Danny Perez (Jamie
Sexton, Northumbria University, UK)
3 The Animated Music Videos of Radiohead, Chris Hopewell and Gastón
Viñas: Fan-participation, Collaborative Authorship, and Dialogic
Worldbuilding (Lisa Perrott, University of Waikato, New
Zealand)
4 From Music Video Analysis to Practice: A Research-Creation
Perspective on Music Videos (John Richardson, University of Turku,
Finland)
Part II: Cultural Codes, Representations, and Genres
5 Framing Personae in Music Videos (Philip Auslander, Georgia
Institute of Technology, USA)
6 Hullabaloo: Rocking the Variety Show in the Mid-1960s (Norma
Coates, Western University, Canada)
7 Détournement and the Moving Image: The Politics of Representation
in an Early British Punk Music Video (Karen Fournier, University of
Michigan, USA)
8 Post-Digital Music Video and Genre: Indie Rock, Nostalgia,
Digitization, and Technological Materiality (Robert Strachan,
University of Liverpool, UK)
9 Katy Perry’s ‘Wide Awake’: The Lyric Video as Genre (Laura
McLaren, University of Toronto, Canada)
Part III: Mediations: Multimodality / Intermediality /
Transmediality
10 Dynamic Multimodality in Extreme Metal
Performance Video: Dark Tranquillity’s ‘Uniformity’, Directed by
Patric Ullaeus (Lori Burns, University of Ottawa, Canada)
11 Tying it All Together: Music Video and Transmedia Practice in
Popular Music (Christofer Jost, University of Freiburg,
Germany)
12 The Palimpsestic Pop Music Video: Intermediality and Hypermedia
(Jem Kelly, Buckinghamshire New University, UK)
13 “How does a story get told from fractured bits?” Laurie
Anderson’s Transformative Repetition (John McGrath, University of
Surrey, UK)
Part IV: Aesthetics: Space / Place / Time / Senses
14 How to Analyze Music Videos: Beyoncé’s and Melina Matsouka’s
‘Pretty Hurts’ (Carol Vernallis, Stanford University, USA)
15 Rural-Urban Imagery in Country Music Video: Identity, Space, and
Place (Jada Watson, University of Ottawa, Canada)
16 “More Solemn than a Fading Star”: David Bowie’s Modernist
Aesthetics of Ending (Tiffany Naiman, Stanford University, USA)
Part V: Subjectivities and Discourses: Gender, Sexuality, Race,
and Religion
17 Justin Timberlake’s ‘Man of the Woods’: Lumbersexuality, Nature,
and Larking Around (Stan Hawkins and Tore Størvold, University of
Oslo, Norway)
18 Gangsta’ Crisis, Catharsis, and Conversion: Coming to God in
Hip-Hop Video Narratives (Alyssa Woods, University of Guelph,
Canada, and Robert Michael Edwards, University of Ottawa,
Canada)
19 Nicki Minaj’s ‘Anaconda’: Intersectional Feminist Fat Studies,
Sexuality, and Embodiment (Anna-Elena Pääkköla, University of
Turku, Finland)
20 Going Too Far: Representations of Violence Against Men in Pink’s
‘Please Don’t Leave Me’ (Marc Lafrance, Concordia University,
Canada)
Abstracts and Keywords
Bibliography
Index
A wide-ranging overview of current research on music videos and audiovisual elements of popular music.
Lori Burns is Professor of Music at the University of
Ottawa, Canada. Her book Disruptive Divas: Critical and Analytical
Essays on Feminism, Identity, and Popular Music (2002) won the
Pauline Alderman Award from the International Alliance for Women in
Music (2005). She was a founding co-editor of the Tracking Pop
Series of the University of Michigan Press and is now serving as
co-editor for the Ashgate Popular and Folk Music Series.
Stan Hawkins is Professor of Musicology at the University of
Oslo, Norway, and Professor in Popular Music at the University of
Agder, Norway. He is author of numerous books, including Settling
the Pop Score (2002), The British Pop Dandy (2009), Prince: The
Making of a Pop Music Phenomenon (co-author Sarah Niblock, 2011),
and Queerness in Pop (2016).
Skillfully curated by Lori Burns and Stan Hawkins, this Handbook
engages with a wide range of music video, from punk, indie rock,
pop, country, R&B, and hip-hop to more experimental practices.
The authors use multimodal analysis and the theories of hypermedia
and transmedia to ensure cutting-edge analysis, while innovative
readings based on gender, race, and religion help situate music
video within its wider cultural, social, and political contexts.
From big-budget productions to low-fi work and animation, this
Handbook marks an exciting new turn for the study of Music
Video.
*Holly Rogers, Reader in Music, Goldsmiths, University of London,
UK, and author of Sounding the Gallery: Video and the Rise of Art
Music (2013)*
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Popular Music Video Analysis is an
exciting collection of scholarship by both internationally renowned
and up-and-coming scholars working at the cutting edge of music
video studies. The essays here approach music video from a range of
theoretical and aesthetic perspectives--from country to extreme
metal, from the 1960s variety show to post-digital video, from
Justin Timberlake to Laurie Anderson, from fat studies to religious
studies: together these essays represent a stimulating and valuable
addition to the field.
*Freya Jarman, Reader in Music, University of Liverpool, UK, and
author of Queer Voices: Technologies, Vocalities and the Musical
Flaw (2011)*
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