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11 - Exclusion and Inclusion in Australian Metal

from Part III - Diversities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2024

Amanda Harris
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Clint Bracknell
Affiliation:
University of Western Australia
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Summary

On the surface, Australian metal music can be read—quite fairly—as a white, working-class, hypermasculine phenomenon. With further excavation, however, the way metal music materializes in local Australian scenes around the country in various ways reveals its power in negotiating complex structures of identity and belonging. Australian metal music is paradoxical and complex, and fans ‘use’ metal in a variety of political ways. Quite specific to Australian metal music, too, are the ways in which it has long been constructed as a frontier space—a space sitting ‘on the edge’ both geographically and politically, wherein metal’s tendency for extremes—its celebration of brutality, and its perpetuation of hegemonic white masculinity—is only matched by its potential for counter-hegemonic politics, radical change, and boundary-pushing. The Australian frontier functions symbolically in our reading, both as a space dominated by the centralizing figure of the colonial white man, but also as a precarious space in which women’s resilience and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s agency in pushing back against colonial normativity rise to destabilize the accepted narratives of invasion politics.

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Further Reading

Hoad, C., Australian Metal Music: Identities, Scenes, and Cultures (Bingley: Emerald Publishing, 2019).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoad, C., Heavy Metal Music, Texts, and Nationhood: (Re)Sounding Whiteness (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, T., ‘Black Metal Not Black-Metal: White Privilege in Online Heavy Metal Spaces’, Media International Australia, 169(1) (2018), 94100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Overell, R., ‘“[I] Hate Girls and Emo[tion]s”: Negotiating Masculinity in Grindcore Music’, Popular Music History, 6 (2011), 198–223.Google Scholar
Wallach, J., Berger, H. M. and Greene, P. D. (eds.), Metal Rules the Globe: Heavy Metal Music around the World (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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