'This is the funeral of the earth': the 'dead-end' environmental discourses of Australian ecometal

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Heavy metal music has had a long relationship with environmental and ecological concerns, one that can be traced as far back as Black Sabbath’s ‘Into the Void’ (1971). Academic work has, however, been slow to recognise the entanglements of metal, environment and ecology in either the global or an Australian context. More recently, however, popular music scholars have begun to acknowledge how the sonic anger of black, death and other genres of extreme metal might be an appropriate medium for social and environmental commentary and protest (Lucas, 2015, p. 555). Therefore, according to Wiebe-Taylor (2009), metal’s ‘darker side is not simply about shock tactics and sensory overload…’, because, ‘metal also makes use of its harsh lyrics, sounds and visual imagery to express critical concerns about human behaviour and decision making and anxieties about the future’ (p. 89). Taking an ecocritical approach, this chapter will map and analyse the environmental concerns and ecological anxieties of Australian metal across a range of different bands and metal genres, as they emerge through three ‘dead-end’ discourses - misanthropism, apocalypticism, Romanticism – which offer little or no hope of survival.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationAustralian metal music
    Subtitle of host publicationidentities, scenes, and cultures
    EditorsCatherine Hoad
    Place of PublicationBingley, UK
    PublisherEmerald Publishing
    Chapter7
    Pages129-144
    Number of pages15
    ISBN (Electronic)9781787691674, 9781787691698
    ISBN (Print)9781787691681
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2019

    Publication series

    NameEmerald Studies in Metal Music and Culture
    PublisherEmerald Publishing

    Keywords

    • Australia
    • Heavy Metal
    • environmentalism
    • Ecocriticism
    • Ecometal
    • Discourse

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of ''This is the funeral of the earth': the 'dead-end' environmental discourses of Australian ecometal'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this