{"title":"一些流行的文化地理,主演西里尔·里吉斯,迪莉娅·德比希尔,伊沃克人,米老鼠,凝固汽油弹死亡,Sylvanian家族和匿名仇恨邮件……","authors":"John Horton","doi":"10.1080/14649365.2023.2257645","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTThis essay is about many things including, but not limited to, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, an Ewok badge, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, the Sylvanian Families, anonymous hate mail, bereavement, the luminous popular cultures of the often-deprecated English Midlands, the absence of so many amazing popular cultures from Social & Cultural Geography, and my own recurrent failure to write about these things. It is part of a Special Issue on (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. The essay opens out a set of questions and prompts for reflection about the relationship (or, more often, the weird non-relationship) between disciplines of Social and Cultural Geography and contemporary popular cultures. At its heart, you’ll find six fragments of autoethnographic writing dealing with: popular cultural absences and silences in the written canon of Human Geography; joy and recognition, but also the burden of doing justice to popular cultures; and manifold antipathies towards academic work on popular culture.ResumenEste ensayo trata sobre muchas cosas, incluidas, entre otras, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, una insignia de Ewok, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, las familias Sylvanian, correo anónimo de odio, duelo, las luminosas culturas populares de la región central de Inglaterra, a menudo desaprobadas; la ausencia de tantas culturas populares sorprendentes en Geografía Social y Cultural, y mi propio fracaso recurrente para escribir sobre estas cosas. Este ensayo forma parte de un número especial sobre (Sobre)colocando lo popular en la geografía cultural. El ensayo abre un conjunto de preguntas e incita a la reflexión sobre la relación (o, más a menudo, la extraña no-relación) entre las disciplinas de la Geografía Social y Cultural y las culturas populares contemporáneas. En su núcleo, encontrarás seis fragmentos de escritura auto etnográfica que tratan sobre: ausencias y silencios culturales populares en el canon escrito de la Geografía Humana; alegría y reconocimiento, pero también el peso de hacer justicia a las culturas populares; y múltiples antipatías hacia el trabajo académico sobre cultura popular.RésuméCet article contient beaucoup, et entre autres : Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, un badge d’Ewok, Mickey Mouse, le groupe Napalm Death, les Sylvanian Families, le courrier anonyme haineux, le deuil, les magnifiques cultures populaires des West Midlands, souvent déridées, l’absence de qui sait combien d’incroyables cultures populaires dans les pages de Social & Cultural Geography et la succession de mes essais infructueux pour écrire à leur sujet. Il fait partie d’une édition spéciale sur (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. ([Mettre en] place le populaire dans la géographie culturelle) et commence avec une série de questions, puis invite à réfléchir sur les rapports (ou, plus souvent, les non -rapports bizarres) entre les disciplines de la géographie culturelle et sociale et les cultures populaires contemporaines. Au cœur de cet article, vous trouverez six fragments d’écrits autoethnographiques qui traitent des thèmes suivants : les absences et les silences de la culture populaire dans le canon de la géographie humaine, la joie et la reconnaissance, mais aussi le fardeau de rendre justice aux cultures populaires ; et les antipathies multiformes envers les travaux de recherche sur celles-ci.KEYWORDS: Popular cultureautoethnographybadgesWest MidlandsPALABRAS CLAVE: Cultura popularauto etnografíainsigniasregión central de InglaterraMOTS-CLEFS: Culture populaireautoethnographiebadgesWest Midlands Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1. If you are looking for an extended discussion of this point … First of all, thank you for taking such an interest and making time to read the footnotes! If asked to explain/defend the essay’s written style, I would make four points. First, I see longstanding norms and expectations of proper research and refined scholarly writing and academic gravitas and confident rhetorical fluency as conceptually and actually exclusionary (being deeply masculinist, classed, ableist and colonialist at heart) (Rose, Citation1993; Caretta et al., Citation2018, M.; Rose, Citation2022). I have come to find a playful, personal, ‘informal’, fragmentary style helpful in thinking and writing otherwise, whilst provoking reflection on what habits of writing are considered not-OK in the contemporary academy (Hayes, Citation2017). Second, running through this essay is a sense that: (i) a radically more diverse range of experiences, voices, positionalities and popular cultures should be recognized in Social and Cultural Geography; and (ii) readers of Social & Cultural Geography should consider our own complicity in constituting academic spaces in which popular cultural diversities have often been effaced. In this context, I have tried to write in a register which is slightly more like my everyday (clumsy, anxious, diffident, scruffy, self-deprecatory, classed-regionally-accented) voice than the confident, self-assured, self-aggrandizing ‘received pronunciation’ of normative contemporary academic writing styles. Third, although I don’t feel I have done this very successfully, I set out to write in a style which resonates with the love, care, detail, exuberance, idiosyncrasies and luminosity of contemporary popular cultures and fandom. Even if the essay is really not your cup of tea, I hope I have shared something of how contemporary popular cultures matter profoundly, in ways which have rarely been acknowledged in the otherwise wonderfully-inspiring pages of Social & Cultural Geography. The list of cultural references featured herein is idiosyncratic, of particular spaces/times, deliberately excessive, and probably opaque or difficult to follow, but I hope it prompts reflection on the kinds of popular cultures which matter to you and yours, and which have probably gone unacknowledged in the formal research outputs of social and cultural geographers too. Fourth, I recognize that the use of footnotes is divisive, especially when done to excess, but I find them really helpful in adding layers of detail, ambivalence, hesitancy, playfulness, exuberance, commentary, context and counternarrative to the main line of any given paper.2. Cyrille Regis: Brilliant footballer; widely hailed as a pioneering sporting hero who faced down racism, campaigned for social justice, and changed attitudes towards black footballers in the UK. Played for West Brom, 1977–84; later part of Coventry City’s plucky 1987 FA Cup winning team. FYI I was nearly named after Cyrille. I’ve always wanted to write something about Cyrille, but never felt I was adequate for the task.3. From an installation at Wolverhampton art gallery; evidently a manifestation of Stewart Home’s Art Strike 1991–93 (Mannox et al., Citation1992).4. Napalm Death: Pioneering grindcore band from West Midlands, UK. Noted for relentless, discordant, excessive, extreme music espousing principles of equality, anti-racism, humanism, socialism, anarchism, vegetarianism, anti-fascism, anti-corporatism and anti-celebrity culture. Saw them loads of times when I was a teenager. A huge formative influence, sonically and conceptually (Springer, Citation2016; Titchner, Citation2004), although a bit of an acquired taste and maybe a bit difficult to listen to now. I once planned to write a book chapter about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.5. Ewok: Peaceable forest-dwelling residents of the forest moon of Endor in Return of the Jedi (1983). Basically, they’re like teddy bears. I once started writing a paper about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.6. BHS: British Home Stores. British department store, 1928–2016. ‘You’ll never guess, its BHS!’ was one of their advertising slogans, hinting at their somewhat ‘budget’, classed market positioning. Alongside other jobs, my mum worked on the shop floor and in the canteen of Walsall BHS every Saturday for many years. Consequently, we got cut-price coats, shoes, light bulbs and Star Wars figures. Thanks mum.7. Doc Martens: Dr Martens, Docs, DMs. Clumpy boots; iconic footwear brand associated with punk, skinhead, 2Tone and other youth subcultures. I had one pair which were basically my only footwear for the whole of my undergraduate and PhD years. Much more fashionable now than when I wore them at university.8. FYI I’m not from ‘Cov’ and, growing up in nearby Midlands industrial town, I learned to disparage it as a supposedly boring, unglamourous, uncool, unattractive place (a football song went ‘West Brom magic, Coventry tragic, West Brom magic, Coventry tragic … ’). So, in this essay – and in British popular at large – Coventry stands for a kind of place which has an arguably humdrum, deprecatory (self-)image but has nevertheless been a fulcrum for beautiful, revelatory, magic, life-changing popular cultures.9. 2Tone movement: 1970s-80s music subculture, epicentre Coventry, UK. Based on genre-bending fusion of ska, punk and new wave, wedded to principles of interracial working class youth solidarity. Principally developed through gigs, scenes, spaces, styles and creative interventions of the 2Tone record label, founded in Coventry and best known for releases by the Specials, the Selecter and the Beat. Beautiful b/w aesthetic. Still amazing.10. Delia Derbyshire (1937–2001): Electrical music pioneer. Luminary of the B.B.C. Radiophonic Workshop through the 1960s. Prodigiously talented but poorly paid. Chiefly remembered for crafting the Doctor Who theme music – a profoundly powerful, luminous composition which retains a power to enchant, terrify and transport listeners – although not credited on-screen for it until 2013. Tragically underrecognised and ill-served by normative forms of pop cultural posterity which have left large chunks of Delia’s output unavailable and figured Delia as principally famous for influencing successful blokes.11. George Eliot (1819–80) English novelist; masculinist nom-de-plume of Mary Ann Evans. Chiefly celebrated for an astonishing run of politicized, moving, multifaceted novels, among the most significant work in the nineteenth century English-language canon. Changed attitudes towards women in literature. Spent three decades in/around what is now the conurbation of Coventry, UK.12. Neil Kulkarni: Pop critic, author and music journalist, from Coventry, UK. Regular contributor to Melody Maker and multiple pop/metal/hip hop/dance magazines since 1993. Consistently a countercultural critic of derivative, nostalgic, exclusionary, blokey, insular, retrograde, white, British, heteronormativities of mainstream pop culture consensus. One of the few British Asian writers to gain prominence in the British music press.13. Coventry Cathedral: Iconic modernist architecture; built around ruins of a medieval cathedral that was bombed out in WW2. A monument to global peace and reconciliation. Arguably transformed attitudes towards architectural modernism and urban design in the UK. A truly powerful, amazing, contemplative space. I’m not a churchgoer, but just sometimes if you stand in front of the stained glass in the nave and the light’s right, it is proper moving.14. Cathedral: V.influential doom metal band, from Coventry, UK. Noted for slow, down-tuned, droney, heavy music. Occasional groovy elements. Obtuse occult lyrics and artwork. Led by Lee Dorrian (former Napalm Death vocalist; leading figure in 1980s Midlands punk/anarcho/crust/metal gig/zine scene; founder of Rise Above records). Seen live, the low-end amps were so loud I felt in an altered state for days afterwards.15. Pete Waterman: Astonishingly successful British pop music impresario/producer/songwriter credited with 500 million+ record sales. Was DJ/promoter/record shop owner in 1970s Coventry at the heart of the 2Tone movement. Best known as part of the SAW (Stock Aitken Waterman) production team responsible for countless hit singles in 1980s UK; often derided for rather bland, formulaic, processed teen pop (NB gendered, classed, blokey forms of ‘real music’ snobbery often pervade this critique) (Rose, Citation2017). Celeb Walsall FC fan and massive model railway enthusiast. I hope to write a collaborative paper about Pete (or more accurately, the snobby non-celebration of Pete in British popular culture) on day …16. Turner Prize: Major annual award for outstanding work by visual artists born/based in UK. The 2021 Turner Prize exhibition was held in Coventry. The prize was awarded to Array Collective for brilliant creative interventions and campaigns principally addressing gendered inequalities, LGBTQ+ identities, and reproductive rights in Northern Ireland. Although personally, I was totally blown away by some of the beautiful work (including a massive whale) created by the neurodiverse artists/activists of Project Art Works collective.17. All these assertions and analyses presuppose that academic publishers’ online search facilities work reliably, which may or may not be a valid assumption.18. i.e. Annals of the AAG, Antipode, Area, Cultural Geographies, Environment & Planning A, Environment & Planning D, Gender, Place & Culture, Geographical Journal, Geography Compass, Journal of Cultural Geography, Progress in Human Geography, Social & Cultural Geography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Urban Geography19. Three fun facts about these lists: (i) the published versions had to be heavily edited to meet journal requirements (imagine the original lists – 3+ times longer!); (ii) only two items appeared in both lists – Black Sabbath (influential West Midlands heavy metal band) and Dawson’s Creek (touching/lachrymose 1990s teen TV drama), which probably tells you way too much about me; (iii) I love the accidental poetry, politics, juxtaposition and serendipity that happen in these acts of listing; there are also three elaborate, extended popular cultural in-jokes in there which no-one has ever commented on, which leads me to think no-one reads my work in detail, which is probably for the best, all round.20. Sylvanian Families: Peaceable, kind-natured little anthropomorphic woodland animals from the town of Sylvania. Initially a line of flocked plastic action figures launched in Japan in 1992. Now a global, cross-platform, multimedia, pluri-marketed phenomenon with at least 157 families. For example, the pandas pictured in Houlton and Short’s paper are the Bamboo family (including, with pleasing serendipity, Bertram Bamboo: an accident-prone academic who ‘sits locked up in his study for days and days, surrounded by great wobbly piles of old papers’ attempting to write (SylvanianFamiliesUK, Citationn.d..)).21. Charming B.B.C. stop-motion animated film about the idyllic village of Greendale (See Author, 2008a, 2008b).22. Great pop group (see Author, 2010).23. Complex multi-platform pop culture phenomenon featuring ‘Pocket Monsters’ (Author, 2012).24. A young wizard. I intended meant to write a paper about it, but lost faith in the project. Then I was going to write this other paper about it, but never found time and grew disheartened and lost faith in the project.25. Magnificent plasticine animation. I was going to write a chapter about it, but got stuck, grew disheartened and lost faith in the project.","PeriodicalId":48072,"journal":{"name":"Social & Cultural Geography","volume":"112 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Some popular cultural geographies, starring Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, an Ewok, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, the Sylvanian families, and anonymous hate mail…\",\"authors\":\"John Horton\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/14649365.2023.2257645\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTThis essay is about many things including, but not limited to, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, an Ewok badge, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, the Sylvanian Families, anonymous hate mail, bereavement, the luminous popular cultures of the often-deprecated English Midlands, the absence of so many amazing popular cultures from Social & Cultural Geography, and my own recurrent failure to write about these things. It is part of a Special Issue on (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. The essay opens out a set of questions and prompts for reflection about the relationship (or, more often, the weird non-relationship) between disciplines of Social and Cultural Geography and contemporary popular cultures. At its heart, you’ll find six fragments of autoethnographic writing dealing with: popular cultural absences and silences in the written canon of Human Geography; joy and recognition, but also the burden of doing justice to popular cultures; and manifold antipathies towards academic work on popular culture.ResumenEste ensayo trata sobre muchas cosas, incluidas, entre otras, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, una insignia de Ewok, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, las familias Sylvanian, correo anónimo de odio, duelo, las luminosas culturas populares de la región central de Inglaterra, a menudo desaprobadas; la ausencia de tantas culturas populares sorprendentes en Geografía Social y Cultural, y mi propio fracaso recurrente para escribir sobre estas cosas. Este ensayo forma parte de un número especial sobre (Sobre)colocando lo popular en la geografía cultural. El ensayo abre un conjunto de preguntas e incita a la reflexión sobre la relación (o, más a menudo, la extraña no-relación) entre las disciplinas de la Geografía Social y Cultural y las culturas populares contemporáneas. En su núcleo, encontrarás seis fragmentos de escritura auto etnográfica que tratan sobre: ausencias y silencios culturales populares en el canon escrito de la Geografía Humana; alegría y reconocimiento, pero también el peso de hacer justicia a las culturas populares; y múltiples antipatías hacia el trabajo académico sobre cultura popular.RésuméCet article contient beaucoup, et entre autres : Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, un badge d’Ewok, Mickey Mouse, le groupe Napalm Death, les Sylvanian Families, le courrier anonyme haineux, le deuil, les magnifiques cultures populaires des West Midlands, souvent déridées, l’absence de qui sait combien d’incroyables cultures populaires dans les pages de Social & Cultural Geography et la succession de mes essais infructueux pour écrire à leur sujet. Il fait partie d’une édition spéciale sur (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. ([Mettre en] place le populaire dans la géographie culturelle) et commence avec une série de questions, puis invite à réfléchir sur les rapports (ou, plus souvent, les non -rapports bizarres) entre les disciplines de la géographie culturelle et sociale et les cultures populaires contemporaines. Au cœur de cet article, vous trouverez six fragments d’écrits autoethnographiques qui traitent des thèmes suivants : les absences et les silences de la culture populaire dans le canon de la géographie humaine, la joie et la reconnaissance, mais aussi le fardeau de rendre justice aux cultures populaires ; et les antipathies multiformes envers les travaux de recherche sur celles-ci.KEYWORDS: Popular cultureautoethnographybadgesWest MidlandsPALABRAS CLAVE: Cultura popularauto etnografíainsigniasregión central de InglaterraMOTS-CLEFS: Culture populaireautoethnographiebadgesWest Midlands Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1. If you are looking for an extended discussion of this point … First of all, thank you for taking such an interest and making time to read the footnotes! If asked to explain/defend the essay’s written style, I would make four points. First, I see longstanding norms and expectations of proper research and refined scholarly writing and academic gravitas and confident rhetorical fluency as conceptually and actually exclusionary (being deeply masculinist, classed, ableist and colonialist at heart) (Rose, Citation1993; Caretta et al., Citation2018, M.; Rose, Citation2022). I have come to find a playful, personal, ‘informal’, fragmentary style helpful in thinking and writing otherwise, whilst provoking reflection on what habits of writing are considered not-OK in the contemporary academy (Hayes, Citation2017). Second, running through this essay is a sense that: (i) a radically more diverse range of experiences, voices, positionalities and popular cultures should be recognized in Social and Cultural Geography; and (ii) readers of Social & Cultural Geography should consider our own complicity in constituting academic spaces in which popular cultural diversities have often been effaced. In this context, I have tried to write in a register which is slightly more like my everyday (clumsy, anxious, diffident, scruffy, self-deprecatory, classed-regionally-accented) voice than the confident, self-assured, self-aggrandizing ‘received pronunciation’ of normative contemporary academic writing styles. Third, although I don’t feel I have done this very successfully, I set out to write in a style which resonates with the love, care, detail, exuberance, idiosyncrasies and luminosity of contemporary popular cultures and fandom. Even if the essay is really not your cup of tea, I hope I have shared something of how contemporary popular cultures matter profoundly, in ways which have rarely been acknowledged in the otherwise wonderfully-inspiring pages of Social & Cultural Geography. The list of cultural references featured herein is idiosyncratic, of particular spaces/times, deliberately excessive, and probably opaque or difficult to follow, but I hope it prompts reflection on the kinds of popular cultures which matter to you and yours, and which have probably gone unacknowledged in the formal research outputs of social and cultural geographers too. Fourth, I recognize that the use of footnotes is divisive, especially when done to excess, but I find them really helpful in adding layers of detail, ambivalence, hesitancy, playfulness, exuberance, commentary, context and counternarrative to the main line of any given paper.2. Cyrille Regis: Brilliant footballer; widely hailed as a pioneering sporting hero who faced down racism, campaigned for social justice, and changed attitudes towards black footballers in the UK. Played for West Brom, 1977–84; later part of Coventry City’s plucky 1987 FA Cup winning team. FYI I was nearly named after Cyrille. I’ve always wanted to write something about Cyrille, but never felt I was adequate for the task.3. From an installation at Wolverhampton art gallery; evidently a manifestation of Stewart Home’s Art Strike 1991–93 (Mannox et al., Citation1992).4. Napalm Death: Pioneering grindcore band from West Midlands, UK. Noted for relentless, discordant, excessive, extreme music espousing principles of equality, anti-racism, humanism, socialism, anarchism, vegetarianism, anti-fascism, anti-corporatism and anti-celebrity culture. Saw them loads of times when I was a teenager. A huge formative influence, sonically and conceptually (Springer, Citation2016; Titchner, Citation2004), although a bit of an acquired taste and maybe a bit difficult to listen to now. I once planned to write a book chapter about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.5. Ewok: Peaceable forest-dwelling residents of the forest moon of Endor in Return of the Jedi (1983). Basically, they’re like teddy bears. I once started writing a paper about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.6. BHS: British Home Stores. British department store, 1928–2016. ‘You’ll never guess, its BHS!’ was one of their advertising slogans, hinting at their somewhat ‘budget’, classed market positioning. Alongside other jobs, my mum worked on the shop floor and in the canteen of Walsall BHS every Saturday for many years. Consequently, we got cut-price coats, shoes, light bulbs and Star Wars figures. Thanks mum.7. Doc Martens: Dr Martens, Docs, DMs. Clumpy boots; iconic footwear brand associated with punk, skinhead, 2Tone and other youth subcultures. I had one pair which were basically my only footwear for the whole of my undergraduate and PhD years. Much more fashionable now than when I wore them at university.8. FYI I’m not from ‘Cov’ and, growing up in nearby Midlands industrial town, I learned to disparage it as a supposedly boring, unglamourous, uncool, unattractive place (a football song went ‘West Brom magic, Coventry tragic, West Brom magic, Coventry tragic … ’). So, in this essay – and in British popular at large – Coventry stands for a kind of place which has an arguably humdrum, deprecatory (self-)image but has nevertheless been a fulcrum for beautiful, revelatory, magic, life-changing popular cultures.9. 2Tone movement: 1970s-80s music subculture, epicentre Coventry, UK. Based on genre-bending fusion of ska, punk and new wave, wedded to principles of interracial working class youth solidarity. Principally developed through gigs, scenes, spaces, styles and creative interventions of the 2Tone record label, founded in Coventry and best known for releases by the Specials, the Selecter and the Beat. Beautiful b/w aesthetic. Still amazing.10. Delia Derbyshire (1937–2001): Electrical music pioneer. Luminary of the B.B.C. Radiophonic Workshop through the 1960s. Prodigiously talented but poorly paid. Chiefly remembered for crafting the Doctor Who theme music – a profoundly powerful, luminous composition which retains a power to enchant, terrify and transport listeners – although not credited on-screen for it until 2013. Tragically underrecognised and ill-served by normative forms of pop cultural posterity which have left large chunks of Delia’s output unavailable and figured Delia as principally famous for influencing successful blokes.11. George Eliot (1819–80) English novelist; masculinist nom-de-plume of Mary Ann Evans. Chiefly celebrated for an astonishing run of politicized, moving, multifaceted novels, among the most significant work in the nineteenth century English-language canon. Changed attitudes towards women in literature. Spent three decades in/around what is now the conurbation of Coventry, UK.12. Neil Kulkarni: Pop critic, author and music journalist, from Coventry, UK. Regular contributor to Melody Maker and multiple pop/metal/hip hop/dance magazines since 1993. Consistently a countercultural critic of derivative, nostalgic, exclusionary, blokey, insular, retrograde, white, British, heteronormativities of mainstream pop culture consensus. One of the few British Asian writers to gain prominence in the British music press.13. Coventry Cathedral: Iconic modernist architecture; built around ruins of a medieval cathedral that was bombed out in WW2. A monument to global peace and reconciliation. Arguably transformed attitudes towards architectural modernism and urban design in the UK. A truly powerful, amazing, contemplative space. I’m not a churchgoer, but just sometimes if you stand in front of the stained glass in the nave and the light’s right, it is proper moving.14. Cathedral: V.influential doom metal band, from Coventry, UK. Noted for slow, down-tuned, droney, heavy music. Occasional groovy elements. Obtuse occult lyrics and artwork. Led by Lee Dorrian (former Napalm Death vocalist; leading figure in 1980s Midlands punk/anarcho/crust/metal gig/zine scene; founder of Rise Above records). Seen live, the low-end amps were so loud I felt in an altered state for days afterwards.15. Pete Waterman: Astonishingly successful British pop music impresario/producer/songwriter credited with 500 million+ record sales. Was DJ/promoter/record shop owner in 1970s Coventry at the heart of the 2Tone movement. Best known as part of the SAW (Stock Aitken Waterman) production team responsible for countless hit singles in 1980s UK; often derided for rather bland, formulaic, processed teen pop (NB gendered, classed, blokey forms of ‘real music’ snobbery often pervade this critique) (Rose, Citation2017). Celeb Walsall FC fan and massive model railway enthusiast. I hope to write a collaborative paper about Pete (or more accurately, the snobby non-celebration of Pete in British popular culture) on day …16. Turner Prize: Major annual award for outstanding work by visual artists born/based in UK. The 2021 Turner Prize exhibition was held in Coventry. The prize was awarded to Array Collective for brilliant creative interventions and campaigns principally addressing gendered inequalities, LGBTQ+ identities, and reproductive rights in Northern Ireland. Although personally, I was totally blown away by some of the beautiful work (including a massive whale) created by the neurodiverse artists/activists of Project Art Works collective.17. All these assertions and analyses presuppose that academic publishers’ online search facilities work reliably, which may or may not be a valid assumption.18. i.e. Annals of the AAG, Antipode, Area, Cultural Geographies, Environment & Planning A, Environment & Planning D, Gender, Place & Culture, Geographical Journal, Geography Compass, Journal of Cultural Geography, Progress in Human Geography, Social & Cultural Geography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Urban Geography19. Three fun facts about these lists: (i) the published versions had to be heavily edited to meet journal requirements (imagine the original lists – 3+ times longer!); (ii) only two items appeared in both lists – Black Sabbath (influential West Midlands heavy metal band) and Dawson’s Creek (touching/lachrymose 1990s teen TV drama), which probably tells you way too much about me; (iii) I love the accidental poetry, politics, juxtaposition and serendipity that happen in these acts of listing; there are also three elaborate, extended popular cultural in-jokes in there which no-one has ever commented on, which leads me to think no-one reads my work in detail, which is probably for the best, all round.20. Sylvanian Families: Peaceable, kind-natured little anthropomorphic woodland animals from the town of Sylvania. Initially a line of flocked plastic action figures launched in Japan in 1992. Now a global, cross-platform, multimedia, pluri-marketed phenomenon with at least 157 families. For example, the pandas pictured in Houlton and Short’s paper are the Bamboo family (including, with pleasing serendipity, Bertram Bamboo: an accident-prone academic who ‘sits locked up in his study for days and days, surrounded by great wobbly piles of old papers’ attempting to write (SylvanianFamiliesUK, Citationn.d..)).21. Charming B.B.C. stop-motion animated film about the idyllic village of Greendale (See Author, 2008a, 2008b).22. Great pop group (see Author, 2010).23. Complex multi-platform pop culture phenomenon featuring ‘Pocket Monsters’ (Author, 2012).24. A young wizard. I intended meant to write a paper about it, but lost faith in the project. Then I was going to write this other paper about it, but never found time and grew disheartened and lost faith in the project.25. Magnificent plasticine animation. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这篇文章是关于很多事情的,包括但不限于,西里尔·里吉斯,迪莉娅·德比郡,一枚伊沃克徽章,米老鼠,汽油弹死亡,森林家族,匿名仇恨邮件,丧子之恋,经常被贬低的英格兰中部地区耀眼的流行文化,《社会与文化地理》中如此多令人惊叹的流行文化的缺失,以及我自己反复写这些事情的失败。这是《(Em)将大众置于文化地理》特刊的一部分。这篇文章提出了一系列问题,并促使人们反思社会与文化地理学学科与当代流行文化之间的关系(或者更常见的是,奇怪的非关系)。在它的核心,你会发现六个片段的自我民族志写作处理:流行文化的缺失和沉默在人文地理学的书面经典;喜悦和认可,也是为大众文化伸张正义的负担;以及对流行文化学术工作的各种反感。简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历:简历;社会与文化之间的关系:社会与文化之间的关系:社会与文化之间的关系:社会与文化之间的关系。Este ensayo forma partte de un número special sobre (sobre)colocando do popular en la geografía文化。El ensayo abre un conjunto de preguntas e incita a la reflexión sobre la relación (o, más a menudo, la extraña no-relación) entre las disciplinas de la Geografía社会与文化与las culas populares contemporáneas。En su núcleo, encontrarás人类文化的碎片化etnográfica人类文化的碎片化:人类文化的碎片化是人类文化的碎片化Geografía;Alegría通过和解,在司法和平民文化方面取得进展;ymúltiples antipatías hacia el trabajo acaadsamicao文化流行。例如:《大陆美人》、《西里尔·雷吉斯》、《迪莉娅·德比郡》、《伊乌克》、《米老鼠》、《Napalm Death》、《Sylvanian Families》、《信使无名氏》、《deuil》、《grandfiques cultures populaires des West Midlands》、《souvent ddsamriridsames》、《the absence de qui sait》、《大众文化》、《the pages of Social & Cultural Geography》、《the succession of mes essessinfraceux pour samrime》等。Il fait party d’une <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1>) (Em)将大众置于文化地理学中。([Mettre en] place le populaire dans la gsamographie culturelle) let ' s avec une ssamurie de questions, please .请(你,加上souvent, les non -rapports。在cœur的文章中,有六个片段描述了关于<s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1>)的自我民族志:关于普遍文化的缺失和沉默,关于人类的<s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1> <s:1>),关于快乐和侦察,关于普遍文化的正义;让我们的厌恶多形式的envers让我们的细胞研究的travaux - de cherche sur -ci。关键词:流行文化,民族志,西部米德兰兹地区,alabras CLAVE:流行文化,etnografíainsigniasregión中部米德兰特地区,ramots - clefs:流行文化,民族志,西部米德兰兹披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。如果您正在寻找关于这一点的进一步讨论……首先,感谢您如此感兴趣并花时间阅读脚注!如果让我解释/辩护这篇文章的写作风格,我会提出四点。首先,我认为长期以来对适当研究、精炼学术写作、学术庄严和自信的修辞流畅的规范和期望在概念上和实际上是排他性的(本质上是深刻的男性主义、阶级主义、能力主义和殖民主义)(Rose, Citation1993;Caretta et al., Citation2018, M.;玫瑰,Citation2022)。我发现一种有趣的、个人的、“非正式的”、零碎的风格有助于思考和写作,同时也引发了对当代学术界认为哪些写作习惯是不合适的反思(Hayes, Citation2017)。第二,贯穿这篇文章的是一种感觉:(i)社会与文化地理学应该认识到更多样化的经验、声音、定位和流行文化;(ii)社会与文化地理的读者应该考虑到我们自己在构建学术空间方面的共谋,在这些学术空间中,流行的文化多样性经常被抹去。 在这种情况下,我试着用一种稍微更像我日常(笨拙、焦虑、羞怯、邋遢、自嘲、有地区口音)的声音来写作,而不是那种自信、自信、自我夸大的、规范的当代学术写作风格的“公认发音”。第三,虽然我不觉得我做得很成功,但我开始以一种与当代流行文化和粉丝圈的爱、关怀、细节、旺盛、特质和明亮产生共鸣的风格写作。即使这篇文章真的不是你的菜,我希望我已经分享了一些关于当代流行文化是如何深刻影响的东西,而这些东西在《社会与文化地理》的其他精彩的鼓舞人心的页面中很少被承认。这里列出的文化参考文献是特殊的,特定的空间/时间,故意过多,可能不透明或难以理解,但我希望它能引起人们对流行文化的反思,这些文化对你和你的人很重要,而且可能在社会和文化地理学家的正式研究成果中也没有得到承认。第四,我认识到脚注的使用是分裂的,特别是当做得过多时,但我发现它们在为任何给定的论文的主线增加细节、矛盾、犹豫、戏谑、丰富、评论、背景和反叙述方面确实很有帮助。西里尔·里吉斯:杰出的足球运动员;人们普遍认为他是一位开拓性的体育英雄,他对抗种族主义,为社会正义而战,并改变了英国对黑人足球运动员的态度。1977-84赛季效力于西布朗;后来考文垂队1987年足总杯冠军球队的成员。我差点就以西里尔的名字命名了。我一直想写一些关于西里尔的东西,但我一直觉得自己不能胜任这项任务。伍尔弗汉普顿美术馆的一个装置;3 .这显然是Stewart Home 1991-93年艺术罢工的表现(Mannox et al., Citation1992)。凝固汽油弹死亡:来自英国西米德兰兹郡的先锋磨核乐队。以无情的、不和谐的、过度的、极端的音乐而闻名,这些音乐拥护平等原则、反种族主义、人道主义、社会主义、无政府主义、素食主义、反法西斯主义、反社团主义和反名人文化。我十几岁的时候看过很多次。巨大的形成性影响,在声音和概念上(Springer, Citation2016;Titchner, Citation2004),虽然有点后天养成的味道,也许现在听起来有点困难。我曾经计划写一本书关于他们的章节,但我对这个项目失去了信心并删除了它。伊渥克人:《绝地归来》(1983)中恩多森林卫星上居住在森林中的和平居民。基本上,它们就像泰迪熊。我曾经开始写一篇关于他们的论文,但我对这个项目失去了信心,就把它删除了。BHS:英国家居商店。英国百货公司,1928-2016。“你绝对猜不到,是BHS!”这是他们的广告语之一,暗示了他们的“预算”,分类的市场定位。除了其他工作,我妈妈每周六在沃尔索尔BHS的车间和食堂工作了很多年。因此,我们得到了廉价的外套、鞋子、灯泡和星球大战人物。谢谢mum.7。马丁医生:马丁医生,医生们,医生们。成块的靴子;与朋克、光头党、2Tone和其他青年亚文化有关的标志性鞋类品牌。我有一双,基本上是我整个本科和博士时期唯一的鞋子。现在比我在大学穿的时候时髦多了。顺便说一句,我不是来自Cov,在附近的米德兰兹工业城镇长大,我学会了贬低它,认为它是一个无聊、没有魅力、不酷、没有吸引力的地方(一首足球歌曲是这样唱的:“西布朗魔法,考文垂悲剧,西布朗魔法,考文垂悲剧……”)。因此,在这篇文章中——以及在整个英国流行文化中——考文垂代表着一种地方,它可以说是一种乏味的、自卑感的(自我)形象,但却一直是美丽的、启示性的、神奇的、改变生活的流行文化的支点。2音调运动:20世纪70 -80年代音乐亚文化,震中英国考文垂。基于斯卡,朋克和新浪潮的流派融合,结合了跨种族工人阶级青年团结的原则。主要通过演出、场景、空间、风格和2Tone唱片公司的创造性干预来发展,2Tone唱片公司成立于考文垂,以special、Selecter和Beat的发行而闻名。美丽的b/w美学。仍然amazing.10。迪莉娅·德比希尔(1937-2001):电子音乐的先驱。20世纪60年代英国广播公司无线电车间的杰出人物。才华横溢,但薪水很低。主要是因为制作了《神秘博士》的主题音乐,这是一种非常强大、明亮的作曲,它保留了一种让听众着迷、恐惧和转移的力量,尽管直到2013年才被搬上银幕。 不幸的是,流行文化后代的规范形式没有得到认可和服务,这使得迪莉娅的大部分作品无法获得,并认为迪莉娅主要以影响成功的乐队而闻名。乔治·艾略特(1819-80)英国小说家;玛丽·安·埃文斯的男性主义化名。主要以一系列令人震惊的政治化、感人的、多方面的小说而闻名,是19世纪英语经典中最重要的作品之一。改变了对文学中女性的态度。在现在的英国考文垂市(Coventry)附近生活了30年。尼尔·库尔卡尼:流行乐评人、作家和音乐记者,来自英国考文垂。自1993年以来,Melody Maker和多个流行/金属/嘻哈/舞蹈杂志的定期撰稿人。一贯反对主流流行文化共识的衍生性、怀旧性、排他性、闭塞性、孤立性、逆行性、白种人、英国人、异性恋行为。在英国音乐出版界崭露头角的少数几个英国亚裔作家之一。考文垂大教堂:标志性的现代主义建筑;围绕着一座在二战中被炸毁的中世纪大教堂的废墟而建。一座全球和平与和解的纪念碑。可以说,它改变了英国对建筑现代主义和城市设计的态度。一个真正强大,神奇,沉思的空间。我不常去教堂,但有时候,如果你站在教堂中殿的彩色玻璃前,光线是对的,那就很感人了。大教堂:来自英国考文垂的极具影响力的厄运金属乐队。以缓慢、低沉、单调、沉重的音乐著称。偶尔的绝妙元素。迟钝的神秘歌词和艺术作品。由李·多里安(前凝固汽油弹死亡主唱;20世纪80年代中部朋克/无政府主义/地壳/金属演出/zine场景的领军人物;Rise Above唱片公司创始人)。在现场观看时,低端功放的声音太大了,我在之后的几天里都感到精神恍惚。皮特·沃特曼:惊人成功的英国流行音乐经理/制作人/词曲作者,唱片销量超过5亿。他是20世纪70年代考文垂2Tone运动中心的DJ/推广人/唱片店老板。作为SAW(股票艾特肯沃特曼)制作团队的一员,在20世纪80年代的英国负责无数热门单曲;经常被嘲笑为相当乏味、公式化、加工过的青少年流行音乐(NB性别、阶级、“真正的音乐”的势利形式经常弥漫在这种批评中)(Rose, Citation2017)。名人沃尔索尔FC球迷和大量的模型铁路爱好者。我希望在……16日写一篇关于皮特(或者更准确地说,英国流行文化中势利的不庆祝皮特)的合作论文。特纳奖:每年颁发给在英国出生/居住的视觉艺术家的杰出作品。2021年特纳奖展览在考文垂举行。该奖项授予Array Collective,以表彰其杰出的创意干预和活动,主要针对北爱尔兰的性别不平等、LGBTQ+身份和生殖权利。虽然就我个人而言,我完全被一些美丽的作品(包括一只巨大的鲸鱼)所震撼,这些作品是由“艺术作品计划”的神经多样性艺术家/活动家集体创作的。所有这些断言和分析都是以学术出版商的在线搜索设施可靠地工作为前提的,这可能是一个有效的假设,也可能不是。《美国地理学会年鉴》、《对跖点》、《区域》、《文化地理》、《环境与规划A》、《环境与规划D》、《性别》、《地点与文化》、《地理学报》、《地理罗盘》、《文化地理学报》、《人文地理进展》、《社会与文化地理》、《英国地理学会会刊》、《城市地理》等。关于这些列表有三个有趣的事实:(1)出版的版本必须经过大量编辑才能满足期刊要求(想象一下原始列表——3倍以上!)(ii)两个榜单中只有两个名字同时出现——黑色安息日(颇具影响力的西米德兰重金属乐队)和《恋爱时代》(20世纪90年代感人/伤感的青少年电视剧),这可能告诉你太多关于我的信息了;(iii)我喜欢在这些列举行为中偶然出现的诗歌、政治、并列和意外发现;书中还有三个精心制作的、延伸的流行文化笑话,但没有人评论过,这让我觉得没有人会仔细阅读我的作品,这可能是最好的,总的来说。西尔瓦尼亚家族:来自西尔瓦尼亚镇的和平、善良、拟人化的林地小动物。最初,1992年在日本推出了一系列塑料人偶。现在是一个全球性的、跨平台的、多媒体的、多元市场的现象,至少有157个家庭。例如,霍尔顿和肖特的论文中所描绘的大熊猫是竹家族(包括令人愉快的意外,伯特伦·竹:一个易出事故的学者,“日复一日地坐在他的书房里,周围是一堆摇摇晃晃的旧论文”,试图写作(SylvanianFamiliesUK, Citationn.d…))。迷人的正在
Some popular cultural geographies, starring Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, an Ewok, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, the Sylvanian families, and anonymous hate mail…
ABSTRACTThis essay is about many things including, but not limited to, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, an Ewok badge, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, the Sylvanian Families, anonymous hate mail, bereavement, the luminous popular cultures of the often-deprecated English Midlands, the absence of so many amazing popular cultures from Social & Cultural Geography, and my own recurrent failure to write about these things. It is part of a Special Issue on (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. The essay opens out a set of questions and prompts for reflection about the relationship (or, more often, the weird non-relationship) between disciplines of Social and Cultural Geography and contemporary popular cultures. At its heart, you’ll find six fragments of autoethnographic writing dealing with: popular cultural absences and silences in the written canon of Human Geography; joy and recognition, but also the burden of doing justice to popular cultures; and manifold antipathies towards academic work on popular culture.ResumenEste ensayo trata sobre muchas cosas, incluidas, entre otras, Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, una insignia de Ewok, Mickey Mouse, Napalm Death, las familias Sylvanian, correo anónimo de odio, duelo, las luminosas culturas populares de la región central de Inglaterra, a menudo desaprobadas; la ausencia de tantas culturas populares sorprendentes en Geografía Social y Cultural, y mi propio fracaso recurrente para escribir sobre estas cosas. Este ensayo forma parte de un número especial sobre (Sobre)colocando lo popular en la geografía cultural. El ensayo abre un conjunto de preguntas e incita a la reflexión sobre la relación (o, más a menudo, la extraña no-relación) entre las disciplinas de la Geografía Social y Cultural y las culturas populares contemporáneas. En su núcleo, encontrarás seis fragmentos de escritura auto etnográfica que tratan sobre: ausencias y silencios culturales populares en el canon escrito de la Geografía Humana; alegría y reconocimiento, pero también el peso de hacer justicia a las culturas populares; y múltiples antipatías hacia el trabajo académico sobre cultura popular.RésuméCet article contient beaucoup, et entre autres : Cyrille Regis, Delia Derbyshire, un badge d’Ewok, Mickey Mouse, le groupe Napalm Death, les Sylvanian Families, le courrier anonyme haineux, le deuil, les magnifiques cultures populaires des West Midlands, souvent déridées, l’absence de qui sait combien d’incroyables cultures populaires dans les pages de Social & Cultural Geography et la succession de mes essais infructueux pour écrire à leur sujet. Il fait partie d’une édition spéciale sur (Em)placing the Popular in Cultural Geography. ([Mettre en] place le populaire dans la géographie culturelle) et commence avec une série de questions, puis invite à réfléchir sur les rapports (ou, plus souvent, les non -rapports bizarres) entre les disciplines de la géographie culturelle et sociale et les cultures populaires contemporaines. Au cœur de cet article, vous trouverez six fragments d’écrits autoethnographiques qui traitent des thèmes suivants : les absences et les silences de la culture populaire dans le canon de la géographie humaine, la joie et la reconnaissance, mais aussi le fardeau de rendre justice aux cultures populaires ; et les antipathies multiformes envers les travaux de recherche sur celles-ci.KEYWORDS: Popular cultureautoethnographybadgesWest MidlandsPALABRAS CLAVE: Cultura popularauto etnografíainsigniasregión central de InglaterraMOTS-CLEFS: Culture populaireautoethnographiebadgesWest Midlands Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.Notes1. If you are looking for an extended discussion of this point … First of all, thank you for taking such an interest and making time to read the footnotes! If asked to explain/defend the essay’s written style, I would make four points. First, I see longstanding norms and expectations of proper research and refined scholarly writing and academic gravitas and confident rhetorical fluency as conceptually and actually exclusionary (being deeply masculinist, classed, ableist and colonialist at heart) (Rose, Citation1993; Caretta et al., Citation2018, M.; Rose, Citation2022). I have come to find a playful, personal, ‘informal’, fragmentary style helpful in thinking and writing otherwise, whilst provoking reflection on what habits of writing are considered not-OK in the contemporary academy (Hayes, Citation2017). Second, running through this essay is a sense that: (i) a radically more diverse range of experiences, voices, positionalities and popular cultures should be recognized in Social and Cultural Geography; and (ii) readers of Social & Cultural Geography should consider our own complicity in constituting academic spaces in which popular cultural diversities have often been effaced. In this context, I have tried to write in a register which is slightly more like my everyday (clumsy, anxious, diffident, scruffy, self-deprecatory, classed-regionally-accented) voice than the confident, self-assured, self-aggrandizing ‘received pronunciation’ of normative contemporary academic writing styles. Third, although I don’t feel I have done this very successfully, I set out to write in a style which resonates with the love, care, detail, exuberance, idiosyncrasies and luminosity of contemporary popular cultures and fandom. Even if the essay is really not your cup of tea, I hope I have shared something of how contemporary popular cultures matter profoundly, in ways which have rarely been acknowledged in the otherwise wonderfully-inspiring pages of Social & Cultural Geography. The list of cultural references featured herein is idiosyncratic, of particular spaces/times, deliberately excessive, and probably opaque or difficult to follow, but I hope it prompts reflection on the kinds of popular cultures which matter to you and yours, and which have probably gone unacknowledged in the formal research outputs of social and cultural geographers too. Fourth, I recognize that the use of footnotes is divisive, especially when done to excess, but I find them really helpful in adding layers of detail, ambivalence, hesitancy, playfulness, exuberance, commentary, context and counternarrative to the main line of any given paper.2. Cyrille Regis: Brilliant footballer; widely hailed as a pioneering sporting hero who faced down racism, campaigned for social justice, and changed attitudes towards black footballers in the UK. Played for West Brom, 1977–84; later part of Coventry City’s plucky 1987 FA Cup winning team. FYI I was nearly named after Cyrille. I’ve always wanted to write something about Cyrille, but never felt I was adequate for the task.3. From an installation at Wolverhampton art gallery; evidently a manifestation of Stewart Home’s Art Strike 1991–93 (Mannox et al., Citation1992).4. Napalm Death: Pioneering grindcore band from West Midlands, UK. Noted for relentless, discordant, excessive, extreme music espousing principles of equality, anti-racism, humanism, socialism, anarchism, vegetarianism, anti-fascism, anti-corporatism and anti-celebrity culture. Saw them loads of times when I was a teenager. A huge formative influence, sonically and conceptually (Springer, Citation2016; Titchner, Citation2004), although a bit of an acquired taste and maybe a bit difficult to listen to now. I once planned to write a book chapter about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.5. Ewok: Peaceable forest-dwelling residents of the forest moon of Endor in Return of the Jedi (1983). Basically, they’re like teddy bears. I once started writing a paper about them, but I lost faith in the project and deleted it.6. BHS: British Home Stores. British department store, 1928–2016. ‘You’ll never guess, its BHS!’ was one of their advertising slogans, hinting at their somewhat ‘budget’, classed market positioning. Alongside other jobs, my mum worked on the shop floor and in the canteen of Walsall BHS every Saturday for many years. Consequently, we got cut-price coats, shoes, light bulbs and Star Wars figures. Thanks mum.7. Doc Martens: Dr Martens, Docs, DMs. Clumpy boots; iconic footwear brand associated with punk, skinhead, 2Tone and other youth subcultures. I had one pair which were basically my only footwear for the whole of my undergraduate and PhD years. Much more fashionable now than when I wore them at university.8. FYI I’m not from ‘Cov’ and, growing up in nearby Midlands industrial town, I learned to disparage it as a supposedly boring, unglamourous, uncool, unattractive place (a football song went ‘West Brom magic, Coventry tragic, West Brom magic, Coventry tragic … ’). So, in this essay – and in British popular at large – Coventry stands for a kind of place which has an arguably humdrum, deprecatory (self-)image but has nevertheless been a fulcrum for beautiful, revelatory, magic, life-changing popular cultures.9. 2Tone movement: 1970s-80s music subculture, epicentre Coventry, UK. Based on genre-bending fusion of ska, punk and new wave, wedded to principles of interracial working class youth solidarity. Principally developed through gigs, scenes, spaces, styles and creative interventions of the 2Tone record label, founded in Coventry and best known for releases by the Specials, the Selecter and the Beat. Beautiful b/w aesthetic. Still amazing.10. Delia Derbyshire (1937–2001): Electrical music pioneer. Luminary of the B.B.C. Radiophonic Workshop through the 1960s. Prodigiously talented but poorly paid. Chiefly remembered for crafting the Doctor Who theme music – a profoundly powerful, luminous composition which retains a power to enchant, terrify and transport listeners – although not credited on-screen for it until 2013. Tragically underrecognised and ill-served by normative forms of pop cultural posterity which have left large chunks of Delia’s output unavailable and figured Delia as principally famous for influencing successful blokes.11. George Eliot (1819–80) English novelist; masculinist nom-de-plume of Mary Ann Evans. Chiefly celebrated for an astonishing run of politicized, moving, multifaceted novels, among the most significant work in the nineteenth century English-language canon. Changed attitudes towards women in literature. Spent three decades in/around what is now the conurbation of Coventry, UK.12. Neil Kulkarni: Pop critic, author and music journalist, from Coventry, UK. Regular contributor to Melody Maker and multiple pop/metal/hip hop/dance magazines since 1993. Consistently a countercultural critic of derivative, nostalgic, exclusionary, blokey, insular, retrograde, white, British, heteronormativities of mainstream pop culture consensus. One of the few British Asian writers to gain prominence in the British music press.13. Coventry Cathedral: Iconic modernist architecture; built around ruins of a medieval cathedral that was bombed out in WW2. A monument to global peace and reconciliation. Arguably transformed attitudes towards architectural modernism and urban design in the UK. A truly powerful, amazing, contemplative space. I’m not a churchgoer, but just sometimes if you stand in front of the stained glass in the nave and the light’s right, it is proper moving.14. Cathedral: V.influential doom metal band, from Coventry, UK. Noted for slow, down-tuned, droney, heavy music. Occasional groovy elements. Obtuse occult lyrics and artwork. Led by Lee Dorrian (former Napalm Death vocalist; leading figure in 1980s Midlands punk/anarcho/crust/metal gig/zine scene; founder of Rise Above records). Seen live, the low-end amps were so loud I felt in an altered state for days afterwards.15. Pete Waterman: Astonishingly successful British pop music impresario/producer/songwriter credited with 500 million+ record sales. Was DJ/promoter/record shop owner in 1970s Coventry at the heart of the 2Tone movement. Best known as part of the SAW (Stock Aitken Waterman) production team responsible for countless hit singles in 1980s UK; often derided for rather bland, formulaic, processed teen pop (NB gendered, classed, blokey forms of ‘real music’ snobbery often pervade this critique) (Rose, Citation2017). Celeb Walsall FC fan and massive model railway enthusiast. I hope to write a collaborative paper about Pete (or more accurately, the snobby non-celebration of Pete in British popular culture) on day …16. Turner Prize: Major annual award for outstanding work by visual artists born/based in UK. The 2021 Turner Prize exhibition was held in Coventry. The prize was awarded to Array Collective for brilliant creative interventions and campaigns principally addressing gendered inequalities, LGBTQ+ identities, and reproductive rights in Northern Ireland. Although personally, I was totally blown away by some of the beautiful work (including a massive whale) created by the neurodiverse artists/activists of Project Art Works collective.17. All these assertions and analyses presuppose that academic publishers’ online search facilities work reliably, which may or may not be a valid assumption.18. i.e. Annals of the AAG, Antipode, Area, Cultural Geographies, Environment & Planning A, Environment & Planning D, Gender, Place & Culture, Geographical Journal, Geography Compass, Journal of Cultural Geography, Progress in Human Geography, Social & Cultural Geography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, Urban Geography19. Three fun facts about these lists: (i) the published versions had to be heavily edited to meet journal requirements (imagine the original lists – 3+ times longer!); (ii) only two items appeared in both lists – Black Sabbath (influential West Midlands heavy metal band) and Dawson’s Creek (touching/lachrymose 1990s teen TV drama), which probably tells you way too much about me; (iii) I love the accidental poetry, politics, juxtaposition and serendipity that happen in these acts of listing; there are also three elaborate, extended popular cultural in-jokes in there which no-one has ever commented on, which leads me to think no-one reads my work in detail, which is probably for the best, all round.20. Sylvanian Families: Peaceable, kind-natured little anthropomorphic woodland animals from the town of Sylvania. Initially a line of flocked plastic action figures launched in Japan in 1992. Now a global, cross-platform, multimedia, pluri-marketed phenomenon with at least 157 families. For example, the pandas pictured in Houlton and Short’s paper are the Bamboo family (including, with pleasing serendipity, Bertram Bamboo: an accident-prone academic who ‘sits locked up in his study for days and days, surrounded by great wobbly piles of old papers’ attempting to write (SylvanianFamiliesUK, Citationn.d..)).21. Charming B.B.C. stop-motion animated film about the idyllic village of Greendale (See Author, 2008a, 2008b).22. Great pop group (see Author, 2010).23. Complex multi-platform pop culture phenomenon featuring ‘Pocket Monsters’ (Author, 2012).24. A young wizard. I intended meant to write a paper about it, but lost faith in the project. Then I was going to write this other paper about it, but never found time and grew disheartened and lost faith in the project.25. Magnificent plasticine animation. I was going to write a chapter about it, but got stuck, grew disheartened and lost faith in the project.