Excessive Flashpoints, Solitary
Demands, Darkest Corners: Ian Curtis, Joy Division,
Critical Theory, and Me
Published: 15
December 2024
Author: Bob Nowlan
Publisher: Left Edge Books
Hardcover
1196 pages
Size: 21.59 x 6.2 x 27.94 cm
ISBN:
979-821851237
"In Excessive
Flashpoints, Solitary Demands, Darkest Corners: Ian
Curtis, Joy Division, Critical Theory, and Me I
inquire into issues of fundamental and ultimate
concern: the meaning, value, and purpose of existence;
our responsibility to and for others; human beings as
complex, multiple, contradictory, and dynamic; the
challenge of intimacy and the power of love; the quest
for authenticity and the struggle for integrity; what
it means to be included and excluded along with how as
well as why this occurs; how social change happens
along with what can be the contribution of artistic
and cultural work toward this transformation; and the
ethical responsibility to confront myriad metaphorical
'darknesses' in our individual and social lives,
despite how challenging, difficult, and painful such
confrontation can so often be. I pursue this inquiry
by staging a dialogue between critical theory and
popular music. I explore how intelligent, sensitive
popular music engages the same issues as does critical
theory and can help us to better understand and
especially better feel how vital, urgent, concrete,
and relevant critical theory can be. I use the music
as art of pioneering post-punk musician Ian Curtis and
his band Joy Division as my vehicle in so doing,
drawing upon my experience teaching five upper level
undergraduate university classes focused on Ian
Curtis, Joy Division, and Critical Theory, at the
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire: English 484,
Seminar in Theory and Criticism: Ian Curtis and Joy
Division in (Historical and Cultural) Context, Fall
2011; English 484, Seminar in Theory and Criticism:
Ian Curtis, The Myth and The Music, Fall 2014; Honors
304, Ian Curtis and Joy Division: Critical Theoretical
Perspectives, Fall 2016; Honors 337, Ian Curtis and
Joy Division: Critical Theoretical Perspectives, Fall
2017; and English 484, Seminar in Theory and
Criticism: 'Let's Take a Ride Out, See What We Can
Find': Popular Music, Issues of Fundamental and
Ultimate Concern, Empathy and Solidarity-Ian Curtis,
Joy Division, and Critical Theory, Spring 2019. The
work my students have done in these classes, and their
enthusiasm for what we have explored together,
inspires me to write this book-as does my now 45+
years' immense passion for Ian Curtis and Joy
Division, life and work, and, especially, music as
art. Joy Division has been my persistently all-time
favorite musical group and Ian Curtis my persistently
all-time favorite individual musician, and the work I
have done in teaching the aforementioned classes, and
on this book, represents my attempt to account for how
and why that might be. Accordingly, and following
advice of colleagues who attended two public
presentations concerned with my work teaching and
writing about Ian Curtis, Joy Division, and critical
theory, this book is a part personal memoir. As a part
personal memoir, I make reference to diverse areas and
periods of my life-experience but I concentrate on my
38 years as a university teacher, and in particular as
a teacher of critical theory and of critical studies
in literature, film, television, popular music, and
popular culture. This is a book, in sum, for anyone
who loves popular music, who cares to think and talk
about 'big issues', who believes in the importance of
empathy, and who would like to help contribute toward
forging a substantive culture of solidarity-especially
by engaging with what popular culture, and in
particular popular music, has to offer in that quest.
I hope this book will show readers that critical
theory can be concrete, relevant, and
urgent-especially in sustained dialogue with popular
culture and in particular popular music-and that
popular culture, notably popular music, can, in turn,
contribute meaningful and impactful ways of helping
make sense of, along with meaningful and impactful
modes of helping engage with, issues of ultimate and
fundamental importance".
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