|
Author |
Title |
Year |
Publication |
Volume |
Pages |
Links |
|
Masciandaro, Nicola |
Metal Studies and the Scission of the Word: A Personal Archaeology of Headbanging Exegesis |
2011 |
Journal for Cultural Research |
15 |
247-250 |
|
|
Moberg, Marcus |
The internet and the construction of a transnational Christian metal music scene |
2008 |
Culture and Religion |
9 |
81-99 |
|
|
Dairianathan, Eugene I. |
Vedic metal and the South Indian community in Singapore: problems and prospects of identity |
2009 |
Inter-Asia Cultural Studies |
10 |
585-608 |
|
|
James, Kieran; Walsh, Rex |
Bandung Rocks, Cibinong Shakes: Economics and Applied Ethics within the Indonesian Death-metal Community |
2015 |
Musicology Australia |
37 |
28-46 |
|
|
Glitsos, Laura |
“Sticky Business”: An Examination of Female Musicians in the Context of Perth’s Metal Community |
2020 |
Popular Music and Society |
43 |
93-113 |
|
|
Weinstein, Deena |
All Singers Are Dicks |
2004 |
Popular Music and Society |
27 |
323-334 |
|
|
Weinstein, Deena |
Birmingham’s postindustrial metal |
2014 |
Sounds and the City: Popular Music, Place and Globalization |
|
38-54 |
|
|
Arnett, Jeffrey |
Three profiles of heavy metal fans: A taste for sensation and a subculture of alienation |
1993 |
Qualitative Sociology |
16 |
423-443 |
|
|
Neil, Clare L. |
Free Thinkers Are Dangerous! Millennial Counterculture and the Music of System of a Down |
2016 |
|
|
|
|
|
Kahn-Harris, Keith |
“I hate this fucking country”: Dealing with the Global and the Local in the Israeli Extreme Metal Scene |
2002 |
Music, Popular Culture, Identities |
19 |
119-136 |
|