喉咙里的骨头:蒙特利尔硬核场景中的视频存档和身份建设

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Olivier Bérubé-Sasseville
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在20世纪90年代和21世纪初,蒙特利尔的硬核场景是一个充满活力,蓬勃发展和充满活力的亚文化,具有强烈的社区意识。在过去的二十年里,这种场景的代际性和周期性导致了大量的人群流动,老年人离开,新人接手。然而,通过一个名叫Andy Chico Mak的人创建的Instagram账户的出现,它的过去记忆正在重新浮出水面。最近在社交媒体上传播的“喉咙里的骨头”系列,以及其他档案,包括传单、采访和那个时代从未见过的镜头,引发了一系列关于存档亚文化的作用和影响的问题。自社会科学的档案转向以来,档案被认为是一个自我反思和建构身份建构和集体记忆创造的过程。在亚文化的情况下,经常被官方遗产机构忽视,理解档案作为文化生产场所的重要性是至关重要的。收集和保存自己制作的文件是学者了解这些社区核心的社会和政治动态的关键。本文分析了通过Andy Chico Mak的作品收集和整理的多年影像档案在创造集体记忆和发展“场景身份”的过程中所产生的影响。通过与当代关于亚文化存档的对话联系起来,它还提供了对新技术的影响和“亚文化集体记忆”创造的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bone in the Throat: Video archiving and identity building within the Montreal hardcore scene
During the 1990s and early 2000s, the Montreal hardcore scene was a vibrant, thriving and dynamic subculture with a strong sense of community. The generational and cyclical nature of such scenes has led, over the past two decades, to a significant crowd turnover with older people leaving and newcomers taking over. However, through the emergence of an Instagram account created by a man named Andy Chico Mak, its past memories are resurfacing. The recent dissemination of the Bone in the Throat series on social media, along with other archives including flyers, interviews and never-seen-before footage from the era, sparks a series of questions regarding the role and impact of archiving subcultures. Since the archival turn in social sciences, archives are considered as a reflexive and constitutive process of identity building and collective memory creating. In the case of subcultures, often overlooked by official heritage institutions, the importance of understanding archives as a site of cultural production is paramount. The collection and preservation of self-produced documents is key to scholars in order to understand the social and political dynamics at the heart of those communities. This article analyses the impact of years of video archives, gathered and organized through the work of Andy Chico Mak, in the process allowing the creation of collective memory and the development of ‘scene identity’. By relating to contemporary conversations about archiving subcultures, it also provides insight into the impact of new technologies and the creation of ‘subcultural collective memory’.
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来源期刊
Punk and Post-Punk
Punk and Post-Punk Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
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