Radiohead and Philosophy: Fitter, Happier, More Deductive (Popular Culture and Philosophy) (Popular Culture & Philosophy) 🔍
edited by Brandon W. Forbes and George A. Reisch Open Court Publishing Company, Lightning Source Inc. (Tier 3), Chicago, 2009
English [en] · PDF · 2.2MB · 2009 · 📘 Book (non-fiction) · 🚀/zlib · Save
description
Product DescriptionSince their breakthrough hit "Creep" in 1993, Radiohead has continued to make waves throughout popular and political culture with its views about the Bush presidency (its 2003 album was titled Hail to the Thief), its anti-corporatism, its pioneering efforts to produce ecologically sound road tours, and, most of all, its decision in 2007 to sell its latest album, In Rainbows, online with a controversial "pay-what-you-want" price. Radiohead and Philosophy offers fresh ways to appreciate the lyrics, music, and conceptual ground of this highly innovative band. The chapters in this book explain how Radiohead’s music connects directly to the philosophical phenomenology of thinkers like Maurice Merleau-Ponty and Martin Heidegger, the existentialism of Albert Camus and Jean Paul Sartre, and the philosophical politics of Karl Marx, Jean Baudrillard, and Noam Chomsky. Fans and critics know that Radiohead is "the only band that matters" on the scene today — Radiohead and Philosophy shows why.About the AuthorBrandon Forbes is a freelance writer based. George Reisch is the author of How the Cold War Transformed the Philosophy of Science and editor of Pink Floyd and Philosophy, Monty Python and Philosophy, and Bullshit and Philosophy. They both live in Chicago.
Alternative author
Reisch, George A.; Forbes, Brandon W.
Alternative publisher
Cricket Books
Alternative edition
Popular culture and philosophy 38 -- v. 38, Chicago, Illinois, 2009
Alternative edition
United States, United States of America
Alternative edition
Original, 2009-04-14
Alternative edition
Chicago, c2009
Alternative edition
FR, 2009
metadata comments
Includes discography.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Alternative description
Anyone can play philosophy (yes yes yes yes yes yes yes yes yes). (Is Radiohead the Pink Floyd of the twenty-first century? / Geoerge A. Reisch ; Radiohead, or the philosophy of pop / Mark Greif ; All the argument we need / John Sylvia ; Radiohead and some questions about music / Edward Slowik
Art and belief (Show me the world as I'd love to see it). New shades / Jere O'Neill Surber ; Why such sad songs? / Micah Lott ;The eraser : start making sense / David Dark
Radiohead, economics, and the music industry (Rainbows and arrows). Taking the sting out of ecological virtue ethics / Daniel Milsky; We capitalists suck your young blood / Joseph Tate ; Everybody hates rainbows / D.E. Wittkower
Radiohead's existential politics (First against the wall). Nietzsche, nihilism and Hail to the thief / Devon Lougheed ; The real politics in Radiohead / Jérôme Melançon ; The impossible utopias in Hail to the thief / Sean Burt ; Where power ends and violence begins / Brandon W. Forbes ; Evil, metaphysics, and politics in Hail to the thief / Jason Lee
Radiohead, Heidegger, and technology (Our iron lungs). What was that you tried to say? / Adam Koehler ; Why a rock band in a desolate time? / Matthew Lampert ; The signature of time in Pyramid song / Michael Thompson ; Fitter happier rolling a large rock up a hill / Lindsey Fiorelli
Radiohead and the postmodern (Not here. Isn't happening). Kid A as a musing on the post-modern condition / Bradley Kaye ; Hypereally saying something / Tim Footman ; Sexier more seductive / Perry Owen Wright.
Alternative description
Evaluates the deeper significance of the popular and politically charged band, discussing their reflection of leading issues while considering how their music has drawn on the philosophical and existential perspectives of master thinkers. Original.
date open sourced
2023-10-11
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