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ghost town

Forms of political protests:
– Attempts to change laws or legislation
– Organised political movements
– Public protests
– Petitions
– Marches

  • Direct resistance against society and government can lead to conflict and backlash so the use and expression of meaning in video and lyrical videos can be used as a more subtle form of rebellion.
  • BBC’s quotation and ideas on ghost town: “Released on 20 June 1981 against a backdrop of rising unemployment, its blend of melancholy, unease and menace took on an entirely new meaning when Britain’s streets erupted into rioting almost three weeks later – the day before Ghost Town reached number one in the charts.

ANTONIO GRAMSCI

Prezzy wannabes, Gramsci, and you - Nevada Current

: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s

Key Terms:
● Hegemonic: dominant, ruling-class, power-holders
● Hegemonic culture: the dominant culture
● Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
● Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values

When writing in the 1930s Gramsci researched why so many people followed and believed in fascist Germany.

It became the idea about hegemony, where more powerful people would change peoples views and imbedded their own political views deep into their culture as the easiest way to make someone believe in such extreme views is to access their emotional and mental state and to get them to truly believe in what they are told, which is done through this hegemony. —–>

  • Cultural hegemony functions by framing the ideologies of the dominant social group as the only legitimate
    ideology
  • The ideologies of the dominant group are expressed and maintained through its economic, political, moral,
    and social institutions (like the education system and the media).
  • As a result, oppressed groups believe that the social and economic conditions of society are natural and
    inevitable, rather than created by the dominant group.

Paul Gilroy + GHOST TOWN QUOTES AND NOTES

Post-colonial Melancholia: Racial representations were “fixed in a matrix between the imagery of squalor and that of sordid sexuality” Gilroy argued that this was gated the black community out by saying they are a “other” race in the majority white Britain.

Racial Otherness: Gilroy explored the idea of racial otherness being underlying in print media during the 1970s and 1980s, he mainly focused on how the idea of black males regularly was set to be a criminal one. Gilroy’s main focus and research was in his study of black representation in the UK. The study was called “There Ain’t No Black In The Union Jack” where he focused on how newspapers were lurid and racist towards black people.

Quotes:

  • “It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers
  • I saw it develop from a boom town, my family doing very well, through to the collapse of the industry and the bottom falling out of family life. Your economy is destroyed and, to me, that’s what Ghost Town is about.
  • “No job to be found in this country,” one voice cries out. “The people getting angry,” booms another, ominously.

GENRE

Genre: a style or category of art, music, or literature.

Genre is mostly associated with music, films and shows. It mostly displays the idea of what the media is about and what the viewer should expect going into it.

Genre is about being predictable and expected, however it should innovative and different as well.

Genre is important for both those who consume it and those who make it.

Institutions make the same types of films due to the fact that the company invests a large amount of money into certain props, certain lighting and certain cameras, this makes a style for the company and their viewers begin to expect it. So the company can make the same type of films, with a different storyline using the same props and the same sets to make more money without spending anymore.

GHOST TOWN BINARY OPPOSITIONS – LEVI-STRAUSS

Binary oppositions means comparing and judging things off of two opposite words, for example; Good vs Evil, Young vs Old. It displays and shows the students opposite themes.

Within Blinded by the Light, its a binary opposite if English vs Pakistani, or his ideal job vs his dads ideal job.

Within Bombshell, the binary opposite would be men vs women.

CONCEPTSTRONGLY AGREEAGREENEUTRALAGREESTRONGLY AGREEOPPOSITE CONCEPT
GOODXBAD
WEAKXPOWERFUL
CALMXCHAOTIC
STRANGEXNORMAL
REBELIOUSXABIDING
FEMALEXMALE
STRAIGHTXGAY
WHITEXBLACK
REACTIONARYXRADICAL
POORXRICH
SOUTHXNORTH
ROCKXREGGAE

claude levi strauss

Binary means 2 different things completely that can be used for comparison. This theory suggests that narratives (=myths) are structured around binary options

eg: good v evil; human v alien; young v old, poor and rich.

As such, it encourages students to understand narrative as a structure of key (oppositional) themes that underpin action and dialogue to develop a set of messages that the audience are able to decode and understand.

CONCEPTSTRONGLY AGREEAGREENEUTRALAGREESTRONGLY AGREEOPPOSITE CONCEPT
SANEXINSANE
FEMALEXMALE
ORDERXDESTRUCTION
WHITEXBLACK
SADXHAPPY
POORXRICH

FUNCTION OF OPPOSITIONS IN MEDIA PRODUCTS

to clearly explain ideas, to create compelling genre, to create

Paul Gilroy Notes

Racial otherness- Gilroy’s study of black representation ‘There ain’t no black in the union jack’ – focuses on the story of UK race relationships from WW2.

  • The immigration from the west indies caused anxieties.

Post-colonial melancholia- Substandard living conditions produced racial representations. There were intensified fears that immigrant communities would fill up Britain.

  • Underlying presence within print media during 1970s-80s arguing that criminalised reputations of black males often stigmatised the black community.
  • Wrote the book ” There ain’t no black in the union jack”
    about the anxieties regarding immigrant behaviour in the UK after WW2 – in which post-war wave of immigration from the West Indies.
  • Draws attention to “Lurid newspaper reports of black pimps living off immoral earnings of white women”
  • Produced racial representations that were “fixed in a matrix between the imagery of squalor and that of sordid sexuality”
  • WW2 immigrants were seen as an alien ‘other’ to an imagined white Britishness.
    Black immigrants were perceived to be ‘swamping’ white communities.
  • Black communities were demonised through the representations that associated them with individual acts of criminality – knife crime and muggings were particular media concerns.
  • These representations construct a ‘common sense’ notion of the criminal black male.
  • Later representations constructed the black community in general, and black youths in particular, to be naturally lawless and incompatible with British white values.

Ghost Town Notes

Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined.

Antonio Gramsci was an Italian philosopher in the 1930s, and he wrote about cultural hegemony.

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.

Cultural hegemony works by passing the beliefs and ideas of the most powerful people in society as the only morally correct and legitimate one.

This is done by expressing and maintaining the ideas through its economic, political, moral, and social institutions (like the education system and the media).

These institutions socialise people into accepting the norms, values and beliefs of the dominant social
group.

The result of this is that society comes to believe that these ideas were not simply conjured up by people in power, but were created by some natural means and not fabricated.

Black Music as a Rebellious Notion

The lyrics of many reggae songs revolve around the black experience black history, black consciousness of economic and social deprivation, and a continuing enslavement in a racist ideology.

Reggae is often sung in Jamaican accents, emphasising a black subjectivity that is independent from white hegemony and offering a method of rebellion from the racist viewpoints offered by the white people inhabiting Britain.

Generally, black music brought forward ideas about challenging what Gilroy has termed, ‘the capitalist system of racial exploitation and domination’.

Britain’s streets erupted into rioting the day before Ghost Town reached number one in the charts. This was due to Ghost Town being released on 20 June 1981 against a backdrop of rising unemployment and it expressed the mood of the early days of Thatcher’s Britain for many.

“It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers, has said in an interview with the BBC.

Neville Staple (vocalist) said in Ghost Town that there was “too much fighting on the dance floor” which he sang from personal experience. This was closely related to the riots and violence which was occurring in Britain at this time, particularly because of the cultural hegemony involving black people who had migrated to Britain after the second world war. It was also linked with the rising unemployment rates in Britain at the time, particularly because of the work of Margaret Thatcher, the prime minister at the time who had closed the doors of a lot of factories, stripping many people of their jobs.

Paul Gilroy explores the construction of racial ‘otherness’ as an underlying presence within print media reportage during the 1970s and 1980s, arguing that criminalised representations of black males regularly stigmatised the black community. and set a bad example for the black community as a whole leading to racism and unfair treatment.

  • ‘Ghost Town’ is a haunting 1981 protest song that still makes sense today
  • It was The Specials’ last song before splitting up and reforming as The Special AKA and stayed at the top of the UK charts for three weeks.
  • The music video was directed by Barney Bubbles and filmed in the East End of London, Blackwell Tunnel and a before-hours City of London.

The fact that this music video is a Ska track relates to the idea that Britain has entered a state of multiculturalism in that Ska is a mix of reggae (Jamaican style music) and punk (white style rock music) and this represents how black and white people were intertwined at the time of the song’s release.

Todorov can be linked to Ghost Town in many ways. One of these is the idea that there is a beginning, middle and end to the music video as they start off in the tunnel in the beginning, enter the derelict city in the middle, and then return back to the tunnel at the end. I think this could represent the journey of many people coming from overseas to Britain at the time of the music video’s release, in that they were coming through the tunnel to get into Britain, they experienced harsh conditions while in Britain, and then left it, going back through the tunnel perhaps through the means of death, or perhaps imprisonment due to the cultural hegemony in effect at the time.

Levi-Strauss can be linked to Ghost Town in that binary oppositions are often hard to consider. For example, it is often unclear whether the music video is of a truly “black” or “white” nature, as many contrasting characters feature. However, there are some binary opposites that very clearly and obvious relate to ghost town, such as employed and unemployed being the latter.

Summed Up

Neville Staples – “Too much fighting on the dance floor” – Fighting and riots at the time because of unemployment – Thatcher and cultural hegemony as described by Gramsci involving black people.

Gilroy – “Racial Otherness” – Criminalised representations of black males set a bad example for the black community – racism, poor treatment.

Gilroy also describes “Postcolonial melancholia” – Idea that people from around the world in Britain are living reminders of the power Britain once had.

Genre of ghost town is Ska, genre is a repertoire of elements described by Neale – mix of reggae and punk music – Links to how black (Reggae) and white (Punk) people were constantly intertwined at the time whether they liked it or not.

Todorov – Beginning middle and end – Going through tunnel, into city and out via tunnel – journey of people from around the world – coming through tunnel into Britain, receiving harsh treatment in derelict city and exiting from Britain through the tunnel via death or perhaps imprisonment.

Levi – Strauss – Binary opposites – Black/white unclear, Unemployed/employed clear.

Paul Gilroy Notes

Postcolonial Theory :

– Racial Otherness : Gilroy studied the importance of black representation. The ‘ There ain’t no black in the Union Jack relates back to the race relations from the Second World war. Thus where the poster-war wave of immigration from the West Indies produced a series of worries and anxieties regarding immigrant behaviour. The black community are constructed as a racial ‘other’ in the predominantly white world of 1950s Britain. There were worries that immigrant communities would swamp / take over white Britain. These fears were further noted in the news in late 1970s and 1980s and routed the black community with assaults, muggings and other violent crimes.

‘It is not then a matter of how many blacks there are, but of the type of danger they represent to the nation’ – Gilroy 2008

– Post-colonial Melancholia :

-The story of UK race relations post W.W. 2 : In 1950’s, the black community such as Indians and the Caribbean came to England as ‘we’ were in desperate need of filled job spaces.

– Legacy of the Empire : Gilroy suggests that we live in ‘morbid culture of a once-imperial nation that has not been able to accept its inevitable loss of prestige’. England couldn’t accept the fact that it was loosing its empire power.

Ghost Town – BBC:

Quote – “It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers, has said.

Quote – “I saw it develop from a boom town, my family doing very well, through to the collapse of the industry and the bottom falling out of family life. Your economy is destroyed and, to me, that’s what Ghost Town is about.”

Quote – “No job to be found in this country,” one voice cries out. “The people getting angry,” booms another, ominously.

 Specials grew up in the 1960s listening to a mixture of British and American pop and Jamaican ska. 1981, industrial decline had left the city suffering badly. Unemployment was among the highest in the UK. The Specials, too, encapsulated Britain’s burgeoning multiculturalism. It expressed the mood of the early days of Thatcher’s Britain for many. 

bbc notes

“No job to be found in this country,” one voice cries out. “The people getting angry,” booms another, ominously.

But, clearly, it expressed the mood of the early days of Thatcher’s Britain for many. “It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers, has said.

PAUl Gilroy + GHOST TOWN QUOTES AND NOTES

Racial Otherness: Gilroy explored the idea of racial otherness being underlying in print media during the 1970s and 1980s, he mainly focused on how the idea of black males regularly was set to be a criminal one. Gilroy’s main focus and research was in his study of black representation in the UK. The study was called “There Ain’t No Black In The Union Jack” where he focused on how newspapers were lurid and racist towards black people.

Post-colonial Melancholia: Racial representations were “fixed in a matrix between the imagery of squalor and that of sordid sexuality” Gilroy argued that this was gated the black community out by saying they are a “other” race in the majority white Britain.

The story of UK race relations post W.W. 2: After Gilroy’s study of how black people and immigrants where being pushed aside by people instead of being included and recognised. After that, 2 decades later, Britain was flooded with “fear” that immigrants and other races were going to “swamp” Britain.

BBC information on Ghost Town “Released on 20 June 1981 against a backdrop of rising unemployment, its blend of melancholy, unease and menace took on an entirely new meaning when Britain’s streets erupted into rioting almost three weeks later – the day before Ghost Town reached number one in the charts.” sums up the idea behind Ghost Town.

I saw it develop from a boom town, my family doing very well, through to the collapse of the industry and the bottom falling out of family life. Your economy is destroyed and, to me, that’s what Ghost Town is about.

 “It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers

“No job to be found in this country,” one voice cries out. “The people getting angry,” booms another, ominously.

ghost town

Key Concepts:


● Cultural resistance
● Cultural hegemony
● Subcultural theory

Context:


● Race Relations
● Thatcher’s Britain

Case Studies:


● Rock Against Racism
● Rock Against Sexism
● 2 Tone

The Idea of Resistance and Political Protest:


● When we first think about political protest, what comes to mind?
○ Attempts to change to laws or legislation
○ Organised political movements
○ Public protests
○ Petitions, marches
● However, we can look at political protest in terms of:
○ Cultural resistance
○ Everyday people
● Why look at cultural resistance?
○ Overt political protest is uncommon. When it occurs, it often results in a backlash.
○ Even if overt political protest does results in changes in legislation, it won’t necessarily change public
opinion.
○ Culture is what influences people’s hearts, minds and opinions. This is the site of popular change.
Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined

Cultural Hegemony:


● Antonio Gramsci: Italian philosopher writing in the 1930s
Key Terms:
● Hegemonic: dominant, ruling-class, power-holders
● Hegemonic culture: the dominant culture
● Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.
● Ideology: worldview – beliefs, assumptions and values
● Cultural hegemony functions by framing the ideologies of the dominant social group as the only legitimate
ideology.
● The ideologies of the dominant group are expressed and maintained through its economic, political, moral,
and social institutions (like the education system and the media).
● These institutions socialise people into accepting the norms, values and beliefs of the dominant social
group.
● As a result, oppressed groups believe that the social and economic conditions of society are natural and
inevitable, rather than created by the dominant group.

Subcultural Theory: The Birmingham School (1970s)


● In the 1970s, a group of cultural theorists in Birmingham applied Gramsici’s theories to post-war
British working-class youth culture
● Looked at working class cultures like the teddy-boys, mods, skinheads, and punks – subcultures
unified by shared tastes in fashion, music and ideology.
● They argued argued that the formation of subcultures offered young working class people a solution
to the problems they were collectively experiencing in society.
Positives of The Birmingham School’s subcultural theory:
● Validated the study of popular culture – previously considered superficial
Criticism The Birmingham School’s subcultural theory:
● Focused on white working class masculinity
● Ignored ethnic minority, female and queer youth cultures

Race:


● Bringing race into the picture in the 1980s, Paul Gilroy
highlighted how black youth cultures represented
cultural solutions to collectively experienced problems
of racism and poverty

Post-War British Race Relations:

After WW2, many Caribbean men and women migrated to Britain seeking jobs.
They were faced with racism and discrimination, and found it difficult to find
employment and housing.

During the 1970s and 1980s, the children of these Caribbean immigrants were
reaching adulthood. They were subject to violence and discrimination from both
the state and far right groups. However, they more likely to resist the racism of
British society compared with their parents.

Racism from the State: The Police


● Frequent clashes between the police and black youth
● Widespread fears over law and order, black street
crime and the figure of ‘the mugger’
● SUS laws
● New Cross Fire (1981)