Strangled: Identity, Status, Structure and the Stranglers

by Phil Knight

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The Stranglers occupy a paradoxical position within the history of popular music. Although major artists within the punk and new-wave movements, their contribution to those genres has been effectively quarantined by subsequent critical and historical analyses. They are somehow "outside" the realm of what responsible accounts of the period consider to be worthy of chronicling. Why is this so? Certainly The Stranglers' seedy and intimidating demeanor, and well-deserved reputation for misogyny and violence, offer a superficial explanation for their cultural excommunication. However, this landmark work suggests that the unsettling aura that permeated the group and their music had much more profound origins; ones that continue to have disturbing implications even today. The Stranglers, it argues, continue to be marginalised because, whether by accident or design, they brought to the fore the underlying issues of identity, status and structure that must by necessity be hidden from society's conscious awareness. For this, they would not be forgiven.
  • ISBN10 1782797963
  • ISBN13 9781782797968
  • Publish Date 30 January 2015
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher John Hunt Publishing
  • Imprint Zero Books
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 180
  • Language English