Mention in The Bookseller

- The Bookseller,

"[This is] the first book to focus on Morissey's lyrical output."-Publishing News

- Publishing News,

mention in Times higher Education Supplement, 4 June 2009

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"Hopps manages to tell Moz's life story in a way that educates even the most hardcore fans (like me). By comparing the artist to Romantic poets and incorporating references to film and other art forms, Hopps examines the former Smiths frontman with a critical eye and treats him as one of the most talented singer/songwriters of the last century. (And he is, isn't he?) Dive in, grab a highlighter and savor the plentiful footnotes."-Whitney Matheson, USA Today's PopCandy

"Hopps gives [Morrissey] plenty of passionate, well-informed attention in The Pagaent of His Bleeding Heart, a stylish and seductive hardcover from Continuum that reflects the love and devotion of its author to the subject's worldview and musical expression. This is not a rote biography or analysis of the shebeens and spielers with collaborators, but an ideal inquiry into the aesthetic and forces which shape Morrissey's lyrics, persona, and own influence on worldwide music culture."-KEXP, Seattle, WA

"The best book-length explication of Morrissey's peculiar genius I've come across. Acute when it does address the music, it focuses mostly on M's lyrical and vocal strategies (coyness, flirtation, caesuras and suggestive trailings away, irruptions of non-sense such as animalistic/Tourettic/comedic growls, ascent into nonverbal raptures of yodeling falsetto), then explores how these particular ways with words announce and embody a particular way of walking through the world; a life stance and ethic. Hopps managed to convince me that there's hidden depths and often-missed mischief secreted within the later work's deceptive slightness and can't-be-arsed-ness. A majorly illuminating work." - Simon Reynolds

"Finally, Morrissey's astonishing career as a writer and singer is treated with the scholarship it deserves. This is an outstanding, elegant book, of interest not only to Morrissey's fans, but to anyone interested in the literary capacity of pop music, as well as its power to enchant, seduce and unnerve" - Michael Bracewell, author of England Is Mine and The Nineties: When Surface Was Depth

"It's the best book-length explication of Morrissey's peculiar genius I've come across." Simon Reynolds

- Simon Reynolds,

"Hopps puts Morrissey, who he describes as pop's greatest disturbance, in the same tradition as Oscar Wilde and the Romantics, for none of whom is a simple or literal reading possible." Reggie Chamberlain-King, http://iheartau.com/reviews/morrissey-the-pageant-of-his-bleeding-heart-by-dr-gavin-hopps/

"Claiming that Morrissey is the most literary singer in the history of British popular music, and thus a serious artist working in a medium widely considered trivial, Hopps (theology, U. of St. Andrews, Scotland) compares his work to a number of canonical writers, among them Larkin, Beckett, Wilde, Hardy, and Christina Rossetti." http://www.entrepreneur.com/tradejournals/article/205550381.html

Mention in magic, October 2009

This is the first full-length scholarly study of Morrissey's career - as a writer, performer, and troublemaker. Morrissey is arguably the greatest disturbance popular music has ever known. Even more than the choreographed carelessness of punk and the hyperbolic gestures of glam rock and the New Romantics, Morrissey's early bookish ineptitude, his celebration of the ordinary, and his subversive endorsement of celibacy, abstinence and rock 'n' roll revolutionized the world of British pop. As a solo artist, too, he consistently adopts the outsider's perspective and dares us to confront uncomfortable subjects. In his brilliant book, Gavin Hopps examines the work of this compelling performer, whose intelligence, humour, suffering and awkwardness have fascinated audiences around the world for the last 25 years. Hopps traces the trajectory of Morrissey's career and outlines the contours and contradictions of the singer's elusive persona. The book illuminates Morrissey's coyness (how can he remain a mystery when he tells us too much?) , his dramatized melancholy (surely more of a radical existential protest than the gimmick some believe it to be), and his complex attitudes towards loneliness and alienation, as well as his intriguing sense of the religious.
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A study of Morrissey's career - as a writer, performer, and troublemaker. It examines the work of this compelling performer, whose intelligence, humour, suffering and awkwardness have fascinated audiences around the world. It traces the trajectory of Morrissey's career and outlines the contours and contradictions of the singer's elusive persona.
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Introduction; Chapter 1: The Oxymoronic Self; Chapter 2: The Art of Coyness; Chapter 3: Maudlin Street; Chapter 4: The Light That Never Goes Out; Conclusion.
The first full-length scholarly study of Morrissey's career - as a writer, performer, and troublemaker.
This is the first to focus purely on Morrissey's lyrical output

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781441124043
Publisert
2012-03-01
Utgiver
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Vekt
394 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
336

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Gavin Hopps is the Research Council's UK Academic Fellow in the School of Divinity at St. Mary's College, the University of St. Andrews, Scotland.