Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2
Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. Edited by Scott Calhoun, with a foreword by Anthony DeCurtis, Exploring U2 contains selections from the 2009 inaugural gathering of "The Hype and The Feedback: A Conference Exploring The Music, Work and Influence of U2." In keeping with U2's own efforts to remove barriers that have long prevented dialogue for understanding and improving the human experience, this collection of essays examines U2 from perspectives ranging from the personal to the academic and is accessible to curious music fans, students, teachers, and scholars alike.

Four sections organize sixteen essays from leading academics, music critics, clergy, and fans. From the academic disciplines of literature, music, philosophy, and theology, essays study U2's evolving use of source material in live performances, the layering of vocal effects in signature songs, the crafting of a spiritual community at live concerts, U2's success as a business brand, Bono's rhetorical presentation of Africa to the Western consumer, and readings of U2's work for irony, personhood, hope, conservatism, and cosmic-time. Official band biographer Neil McCormick considers U2 as a Dublin-shaped band, and Danielle Rhéaume tells how discovering and returning Bono's lost briefcase of lyrics for the album October propelled her along her own artistic journey.

This thoughtful and timely collection recognizes U2's music both as art and commentary on personal journeys and cultural dialogues about contemporary issues. It offers insights and critical assessments that will appeal not only to scholars and students of popular music and culture studies but to those in the fields of theology, philosophy, the performing arts, literature, and all intellectually curious fans of U2.
1120495492
Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2
Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. Edited by Scott Calhoun, with a foreword by Anthony DeCurtis, Exploring U2 contains selections from the 2009 inaugural gathering of "The Hype and The Feedback: A Conference Exploring The Music, Work and Influence of U2." In keeping with U2's own efforts to remove barriers that have long prevented dialogue for understanding and improving the human experience, this collection of essays examines U2 from perspectives ranging from the personal to the academic and is accessible to curious music fans, students, teachers, and scholars alike.

Four sections organize sixteen essays from leading academics, music critics, clergy, and fans. From the academic disciplines of literature, music, philosophy, and theology, essays study U2's evolving use of source material in live performances, the layering of vocal effects in signature songs, the crafting of a spiritual community at live concerts, U2's success as a business brand, Bono's rhetorical presentation of Africa to the Western consumer, and readings of U2's work for irony, personhood, hope, conservatism, and cosmic-time. Official band biographer Neil McCormick considers U2 as a Dublin-shaped band, and Danielle Rhéaume tells how discovering and returning Bono's lost briefcase of lyrics for the album October propelled her along her own artistic journey.

This thoughtful and timely collection recognizes U2's music both as art and commentary on personal journeys and cultural dialogues about contemporary issues. It offers insights and critical assessments that will appeal not only to scholars and students of popular music and culture studies but to those in the fields of theology, philosophy, the performing arts, literature, and all intellectually curious fans of U2.
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Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2

Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2

Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2

Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll?: Essays on the Music, Work, and Influence of U2

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Overview

Exploring U2: Is This Rock 'n' Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. Edited by Scott Calhoun, with a foreword by Anthony DeCurtis, Exploring U2 contains selections from the 2009 inaugural gathering of "The Hype and The Feedback: A Conference Exploring The Music, Work and Influence of U2." In keeping with U2's own efforts to remove barriers that have long prevented dialogue for understanding and improving the human experience, this collection of essays examines U2 from perspectives ranging from the personal to the academic and is accessible to curious music fans, students, teachers, and scholars alike.

Four sections organize sixteen essays from leading academics, music critics, clergy, and fans. From the academic disciplines of literature, music, philosophy, and theology, essays study U2's evolving use of source material in live performances, the layering of vocal effects in signature songs, the crafting of a spiritual community at live concerts, U2's success as a business brand, Bono's rhetorical presentation of Africa to the Western consumer, and readings of U2's work for irony, personhood, hope, conservatism, and cosmic-time. Official band biographer Neil McCormick considers U2 as a Dublin-shaped band, and Danielle Rhéaume tells how discovering and returning Bono's lost briefcase of lyrics for the album October propelled her along her own artistic journey.

This thoughtful and timely collection recognizes U2's music both as art and commentary on personal journeys and cultural dialogues about contemporary issues. It offers insights and critical assessments that will appeal not only to scholars and students of popular music and culture studies but to those in the fields of theology, philosophy, the performing arts, literature, and all intellectually curious fans of U2.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780810881587
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 10/13/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Scott Calhoun is professor of English at Cedarville University in Ohio. He is editor of Exploring U2: Is This Rock ‘n’ Roll? and the director of The U2 Conference.

Table of Contents

Foreword: U2-Contents and Discontents Anthony Decurtis ix

Acknowledgments xxi

Introduction Scott Calhoun xxiii

Part I Eighteen Years of Dawning

Chapter 1 Boy to Man: A Dublin-Shaped Band Neil McCormick 3

Chapter 2 My Voyage of Discovery: Returning October's Lost Lyrics 23 Danielle Rhéaume 23

Chapter 3 Potent Crossroads: Where U2 and Progressive Awareness Meet Rachel E. Neiler 38

Chapter 4 The Authentic Self in Paul Ricoeur and U2 Jeffrey F. Keuss Sara Koenig 54

Part II Don't Expect, Suggest

Chapter 5 Vocal Layering as Deconstruction and Reinvention in U2 Christopher Endrinal 67

Chapter 6 "Bullet the Blue Sky" as an Evolving Performance Steve Taylor 84

Chapter 7 U2: An Elevated Brand Michele O'Brien 98

Charter 8 Nothing Succeeds Like Failure: U2 and the Politics of Irony Kevin J. H. Dettmar 112

Part III Take This Soul

Chapter 9 Playing the Tart: Contexts and Intertexts for "Until the End of the World" Daniel T. Kline 129

Chapter 10 Where Leitourgia Has No Name: U2 Live Beth Maynard 165

Chapter 11 Bono v. Nick Cave Re: Jesus Greg Clarke 165

Chapter 12 Fallen Angels in the Hands of U2 Deane Galbraith 179

Part IV When I Look at the World

Chapter 13 Bono's Rhetoric of the Auspicious: Translating and Transforming Africa for the Consumerist West Bruce L. Edwards 197

Chapter 14 Boy, Baby, and Bomb: U2's Use of Antilanguage John Hurtgen 216

Chapter 15 All That We Can't Leave Behind: U2's Conservative Voice Stephen Catanzarite 229

Chapter 16 Across the Universe: U2's Hope in Space and Time Scott Calhoun 240

Bibliography: Selected Books, Essays, and Articles for Studying U2 261

Subject Index 265

Song Index 269

About the Editor and Contributors 273

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