Page 145 - Cultural Change and Ordinary Life
P. 145

136  Index

                     Longhurst, B., 9, 10, 20, 28, 37, 44, 52, 99,  occupational groups, 93–5
                        101, 106                       older people, 79
                     love, 121                         omnivore thesis, 6, 27–8, 66, 90–103
                     Lyotard, J.-F., 25                 early statements and key themes, 92–7
                                                        qualitative consideration and modes of
                     magazines, 2, 98                     speech, 100–2
                     Manchester, 60, 101                wider applications and development of
                     Marxism, critical, 8                 explanations, 97–9
                     mass audiences, 36–7, 41, 42, 119–20  ordering, 17, 115
                     mass culture, 93–5                 of time and activity, 88–9
                     mass observation, 11, 29          ordinary life, 3–4, 5, 7–21, 121–2
                     Mathiesen, T., 28–9                morality, evaluation and, 71–3
                     meanings, personal, 78             music, sound and, 16–19
                     media                              ordering, 88–9
                       defining, 3                       television viewing and, 78
                       increased importance, 1–3        theories of everyday life, 7, 8–11
                       use, 20–1                       outward-looking social capital, 81–2
                       see also under individual media
                     media drenching, 3, 5, 10, 102–3  paid work, 75–6
                     middle class, 20–1, 27, 85, 91    panopticism, 29
                       cultural taste and modes of speech, 101–2  paradoxical modernity, 26–7
                       and education, 85–8             performance, 4, 6, 50
                     middlebrow culture, 93             ordinary life and, 5, 10, 28–9
                     mobility, 14, 66, 69               spectacle/performance paradigm see
                       social mobility, 86–7, 95, 98      spectacle/performance paradigm
                     modernity, 25–8                   performative evaluation, 72
                     modes of speech, 100–2            performativity, 35–42, 50
                     moral sentiments, 72–3            performing, 5, 68, 120, 122
                     morality, 71–3                     and belonging, 50–1, 58–60
                     music, 2, 96, 110                 personal choice, 25–8
                       globalization and hybridization, 24  personal stereos, 18–19
                       occupational groups and, 93–4   perspective, 69–71
                       omnivorous refrain, 101         Peterson, R.A., 27, 53–4, 92–7
                       scene, 52–4, 55, 56–7, 57–8, 59, 60  petty producer, 43–4, 117
                       sound, ordinary life and, 16–19  photography, 56
                       univores, 97                    place
                       world music, 98–9, 100           and belonging, 51–2, 60
                       youth subculture, 45–6           and extended audience, 115–17
                                                        fandom and, 108–9, 111–12
                     naming, 115                        and scene, 54, 56–7
                     narcissism, 18                    political globalization, 22–4
                     narrative                         political participation, 83, 84–5
                       construction by personal stereo users, 18  political science, 4
                       of location, 67–8               political trust, 83, 85
                       scene and, 54–5, 57, 59         positionality, 67–8
                     needs, real human, 8              postmodernism, 5–6, 76, 90–1, 102
                     networks, 14, 32                   fragmentation and personal choice, 25–8
                       see also social capital         power, 9, 29, 41–2
                     neutrosemy, 115                    extended audience, 115–17
                     news consumption, 78              practice, 30–1
                     newspapers, 2, 98                  need to explore practices, 100
                     Norris, P., 33, 78                Presley, Elvis, 112
   140   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148