A Pelt, a shrub, a soil sample

A Poetics Blog. Noise, Comment, Theory.

Monday, August 30, 2010

More k-punk: Morrissey and Unemployment

"Is there anyone who has caught the agony of this state of worklessness better than Morrissey? The useless jouissance of refusing what was anyway impossible: "No I've never had a job/ because I've never really wanted one" "No, I've never had a job because I'm too shy" ... I do sometimes think that the implicit political position in those handful of early Smiths songs was one of the most powerful of the 80s. Singing "England is mine and it owes me a living" at the time of 3 million unemployed and the Miners Strike ... Rejecting the masculine destiny of Fordist worker at the very moment when that destiny was being denied to the working class ("No, we cannot cling to the old dreams any more") ... Rejecting, that is to say, all of those working class homilies about the dignity of labour"
Ross Brighton at 10:36 PM
Share

No comments:

Post a Comment

‹
›
Home
View web version

About Me

My photo
Ross Brighton
Poet and Critic based in Auckland, New Zealand.

Correspondence welcomed.

Contact: ross DOT brighton AT gmail DOTCOM
View my complete profile
Powered by Blogger.