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thesis

25 06 2004

I’ve finally gotten around to submitting my Masters thesis for permanent binding. It’s now online for your reading pleasure. If you find typos, don’t tell me! But any other feedback or comments would be hugely appreciated.

Here’s the abstract:

High Culture as Subculture: Brisbane’s Contemporary Chamber Music Scene

The aim of the dissertation is to discover the extent to which methodologies and conceptual frameworks used to understand popular culture may also be useful in the attempt to understand contemporary high culture. The dissertation addresses this question through the application of subculture theory to Brisbane’s contemporary chamber music scene, drawing on a detailed case study of the contemporary chamber ensemble Topology and its audiences. The dissertation begins by establishing the logic and necessity of applying cultural studies methodologies to contemporary high culture. This argument is supported by a discussion of the conceptual relationships between cultural studies, high culture, and popular culture, and the methodological consequences of these relationships.

In Chapter 2, a brief overview of interdisciplinary approaches to music reveals the central importance of subculture theory, and a detailed survey of the history of cultural studies research into music subcultures follows. Five investigative themes are identified as being crucial to all forms of contemporary subculture theory: the symbolic; the spatial; the social; the temporal; the ideological and political. Chapters 3 and 4 present the findings of the case study as they relate to these five investigative themes of contemporary subculture theory. Chapter 5 synthesises the findings of the previous two chapters, and argues that while participation in contemporary chamber music is not as intense or pervasive as is the case with the most researched street-based youth subcultures, it is nevertheless possible to describe Brisbane?s contemporary chamber music scene as a subculture.

The dissertation closes by reflecting on the ways in which the subcultural analysis of contemporary chamber music has yielded some insight into the lived practices of high culture in contemporary urban contexts.

Now I just have to find time to write the articles that are supposed to come out of it.

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  • Date : 25 June 2004
  • Categories : life in academia, music scenes

3 responses to “thesis”

1 07 2004
tim boucher (12:43:21) :

WHOO BOY! does that ever sound heady… im more of the mind nowadays that there is no such thing as “high culture” anymore, so i dont know if i agree with the underlying premise this whole thing is based on. or maybe im not quite sure exactly how youre defining “high culture”.

ill have to come back and look at your thesis when i get back from toronto next week.

1 07 2004
jean (12:53:26) :

Hi Tim! nice to hear from you. And yes, you must read it before arguing with me…you must read…every…word… [*evil laugh*]

1 07 2004
tim boucher (12:58:20) :

holy hell. 107 pages? maybe ill skim it. i just read the title over again, and maybe i was misinterpreting your approach in the comment above

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