The Loneliest Jukebox

Graham Barnfield's weblog, being gradually replaced by his Twitter feed - www.twitter.com/GrahamBarnfield

Graham Author Page

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

About that Olympic host city...

Very pleased the other day to get my contributor copy of London After Recession: A Fictitious  Capital?, published by Ashgate on 28 Sep 2012 (ISBN-10: 1409431029 and ISBN-13: 978-1409431022). You can pre-order it at the links below. My chapter is called "Farewell Nathan Barley? The Rise and Declineof the Freelance Creative".



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Monday, January 02, 2012

New anthology chapter alert!

Why not make it even more of a happy new year, or something, with London After the Recession: A Fictitious Capital? (edited by Gavin Poynter and Iain MacRury, both at University of East London, UK)

"This book examines the impact of the recession and discusses London’s future trajectory as an entrepreneurial city and capital of the United Kingdom. While recognising the enduring capacity of London to ‘reinvent’ itself, contributors evaluate different dimensions of the city’s current and future development through analyses derived from sociological, economic, cultural and urban studies perspectives." May 2012 c. 280 pages Hardback ISBN 978-1-4094-3102-2 c. £60.00; ebook 978-1-4094-3103-9 (see p.18 of the Ashgate catalogue).

Any overlap between my chapter and Stewart Home's contribution to Art, Money, Parties is entirely coincidental.

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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Anthologise this!

Someone did:

My bit is Chapter 27: "2016, 2022, 2030, Go! Sustainability and Arabian Gulf Sporting Megaprojects",
pp. 269-276 of Jill Savery and Keith Gilbert (eds.) Sustainability and Sport (Common Ground Publishing).

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Friday, December 03, 2010

Doh-a!

Regular readers will know that this blog has gone a bit quiet lately, usurped by Twitter. Let me draw your attention to my new Spiked article about Qatar 2022, which ought to get me struck off a few people's Xmas card lists this year.

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Sunday, January 17, 2010

My revisions: must we burn Harris (1995)?

A few days ago, the contributor copies of Richard Wright@100 beat the snow and arrived in the post (ISBN 9789727729395 - obrigada, Paula!). My chapter is called 'American Structure' and revolves around the literary apprenticeships of Wright and, to a much lesser extent, Ralph Ellison. More or less on the same day, I bumble across William Burrison's essay on 'Richard's Wright's Tricky Apprenticeship', which originally appeared in CLA Journal 29 (June 1986).* After the usual expletives and sweating it, I was pleased to discover no major sins of omission on my part. It does beg the question: at what point does the unreasonable expectation of total knowledge shade into being a rubbish researcher?

In related news, I was playing catch-up with Jonathan Harris recently. Harris' book on federal art** appeared as I was writing up my Ph.D. on a related topic. Panic ensued that it would force me to rewrite, but an appearance by Harris at my then university and a look at some of his other material, plus reading the book itself (!), convinced me I'd be fine. Up to a point, aspects of our arguments overlapped.

Cut forward by a decade, for Harris, or 15 years for me, in my sluggish efforts to stay on top of the literature, and Harris publishes the following description of his work:
'I think I pursued [my] scepticism over the value of art ... by deciding to research and write a Ph.D. about paintings and sculptures, those produced in the US during the 1930s, that remain in art derided history as some of the most awful ever produced anywhere.'

So far so good. Some of my wanderings took me to the same place.

'My attitude superintending this period of work, I now recognize, was very confused: ... I believed that questions of value or quality in art were simply irrelevant to me understanding why and how art was mobilized by Roosevelt's New Deal state. Particularly irrelevant were "modernist" art history judgements from the post-1945 period subsequently imposed on 1930s art.' (p.4)

Damn.

Subsequent commentary suggests that the author was in the process of revising his take on New Deal art (and more), not least because of the personal 'issues of identity' propelling him to revise his own subject-position as a writer: 'This period for me (1980-1986) was a heady time mixing theoretical Marxism and practical socialist politics, along with an engagement with a much more heterogeneous emergent intellectual discourse now called "cultural theory". (p.5) By 2005, things had clearly moved on.

Although he says it's not a confession, the 2005 book opens with the author setting things up along similar lines to Morrisey: has the world changed or has he changed? 'Probably both' is the answer, but where does this leave someone who is trying to work with his 1995 book in 2010?






*A version of the essay appears as Lawd Today: 'Richard's Wright's Tricky Apprenticeship' in pp.98-109 of Richard Wright: Critical Perspectives Past and Present.
**Federal Art and National Culture: The Politics of Identity in New Deal America (Cambridge Studies in American Visual Culture)

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Saturday, January 02, 2010

Cobbett over here

Here's me in the THE, reconsidering William Cobbett's Rural Rides. Students of CC1500 Critical Approaches to Journalism will have heard all this already. Happy new year!


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Monday, December 28, 2009

Wright here, right now


Coming soon: The anthology Richard Wright at 100  (ISBN 9789727729395), edited by PAULA ELYSEU MESQUITA and published by Edições Colibri. I've got a chapter in it.

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Friday, October 02, 2009

Pro-am gulf

Over in the first issue of Proof, I have a short essay telling everyone to 'calm down, calm down' in the heated debate over objectivity and user-generated content. (Must the subconscious influence of my upcoming trip to Liverpool to celebrate someone's birthday.)

Reference: Graham Barnfield, 'Born Yesterday: By treating amateur journalism as a threat, the UGC controversy ignores history', Proof: Reading Journalism and Society, Volume 1 2010.

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Thursday, August 27, 2009

Straight to Video

Over at Spiked, I'm taking a chainsaw to the Video Recordings Act 1984. Enjoy!

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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Been a bit busy

There was a time in my life when I cut down on blogging because I was working in a "tolerant" authoritarian state. Not any more. These days I've cut back because I am so busy, working furiously and galavanting off now and then (albeit to do work). So happy new year everyone.

Meanwhile certain publications bearing my pawprint continue to appear, so if you need your regular gold of Graham's for breakfast, check out some of these links:

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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

For reference

Coming soon: my entries in British Crime Writing: An Encyclopedia, edited by Barry Forshaw and published by Greenwood.

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Monday, November 03, 2008

Working Doors, Dalrymple Deconstructed

The new issue of Reconstruction, a section of which I co-edited, is out today. Read on.

In the same issue is a book review of books by Simon Winlow and Theodore Dalrymple. If it seems like these books have been around for a while, that's because they have (the review having gone around the houses at one journal for donkey's years before getting rejected, while leaving me to guess this fact for myself).

What I really needed was for the bloody thing to appear at around the same time as an earlier review of a Francis Gilbert book, as with it I might have avoided a grumpy email exchange with Dr. Winlow himself. Anyway, hopefully the belated appearance of this review article might set things straight.

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Saturday, August 02, 2008

On the Wayne

My take on the new Batman film and its popularity appears on Spiked. (If you are reading this blog after reading "Nostalgia for Kidults", then you know that already.)

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Saturday, March 22, 2008

Reconstruction; anti-construction

The latest issue of Reconstruction - Class, Culture and Public Intellectuals - is online now, with my co-editorial fingerprints all over it. It was a long haul, but I'm very pleased with the content (and the form: thanks Justin and Sean).

Meanwhile a return to the UK presents me with public life that seems to be a caricature of itself. Being away means missing the mediating links, but preoccupations with body image, plastic bags and cycling abound. In my old stomping grounds, a patch of industrial wasteland - the former Halex factory - will not be turned into flats and a supermarket, ostensibly in order to preserve the character of the area. Ironically, if the Halex factory was back in action, environmentalists would oppose that too. At least the residents of Rosia Montana are hitting back against the industrial counter-revolution; when are Brits going to do the same?

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Monday, November 26, 2007

My hidden hand

I am one of the writers of the document at this link. Hold onto your hats, readers ...

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Thursday, October 04, 2007

Looking Daggers

There are times when I miss teaching, so it's good to see an article of mine being used to teach film in Lexington, Kentucky. Ahh, film school, I'm almost tempted to enroll myself...

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Monday, July 09, 2007

A hack keeps his hand in


7 Days, the local equivalent of Metro, has got itself a new book reviewer. Nice work if you can get it.


As for the book itself, you can buy it here:

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Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Straight to Video

My screen acting career is going nowhere. First the cover artwork for my debut feature credit features "A great quote" from the Guardian, apparently (see left). Did the designers forget to clean up, or is this wishful thinking?

Then the film gets slammed over at DVD Reviewer: "You get professional performances from the likes of Jenny Agutter and Jeremy Bulloch, weighed against the majority of the cast who seem to be giving it a go in between their day jobs."

Busted!



Poor reviews aside, you can buy the movie here:

UK Terror attacks? Some sort of Doctor's Plot apparently. Unfortunate phrase that...

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Still With Us

My comments on happy slapping live on at this link. The full reference is Peter Mörtenböck and Helge Mooshammer, "Happy Slapping – Urban Violence in the Age of Camera Phones", Monu: Magazine on Urbanism 07-10-06, BRUTAL URBANISM ISSUE. Enjoy.

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Saturday, February 10, 2007

18 on the 19th

On Monday 19 February I'm off to 18 Doughty Street, "much more than a fine Georgian residence that has been renovated to the highest standards. It truly is a home and not just an office or studio. It is the home of the conservative movement," apparently.

I'll be a guest on Claire Fox News – Ideas behind the headlines at 8pm, discussing reality TV and the Celebrity Big Brother racism row.


Alan Wald writes with a reminder of his forthcoming book, Trinity of Passion
The Literary Left and the Antifascist Crusade
. "The second of three volumes that track the political and personal lives of several generations of U.S. left-wing writers, Trinity of Passion carries forward the chronicle launched in Exiles from a Future Time: The Forging of the Mid-Twentieth-Century Literary Left. In this volume Wald delves into literary, emotional, and ideological trajectories of radical cultural workers in the era when the International Brigades fought in the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) and the United States battled in World War II (1941-45). Probing in rich and haunting detail the controversial impact of the Popular Front on literary culture, he explores the ethical and aesthetic challenges that pro-Communist writers faced.
Wald presents a cross section of literary talent, from the famous to the forgotten, the major to the minor. The writers examined include Len Zinberg (a.k.a. Ed Lacy), John Oliver Killens, Irwin Shaw, Albert Maltz, Ann Petry, Chester Himes, Henry Roth, Lauren Gilfillan, Ruth McKenney, Morris U. Schappes, and Jo Sinclair. He also uncovers dramatic new information about Arthur Miller's complex commitment to the Left.


Confronting heartfelt questions about Jewish masculinity, racism at the core of liberal democracy, the corrosion of utopian dreams, and the thorny interaction between antifascism and Communism, Wald re-creates the intellectual and cultural landscape of a remarkable era."

If it's anything like as good as the first part of the trilogy, I would strongly recommend it.

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