Sean Campbell's Irish Blood, English Heart named 'Music Book of the Year'
The book, which was published in February by Cork University Press, draws on extensive archival research of print and audio-visual media, as well as original interviews with key figures including Shane MacGowan, Johnny Marr, Kevin Rowland and Cáit O'Riordan. A paperback edition is also now available from Amazon.
More praise for Irish Blood, English Heart:
Simon Frith
Tovey Professor of Music, University of Edinburgh
“This is not just a subtle and sophisticated scholarly contribution to popular music and Irish studies. It is also a fine and exciting account of how music can be used to make sense of the complexity, anxiety and exhilaration of contemporary cultural identities.
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Sean O'Hagan
The Observer
“The role of the second-generation Irish in shaping British pop has, until now, been all but overlooked. Sean Campbell looks deeply and thought-provokingly at the second-generation Irish "in-betweenness" of Kevin Rowland, Shane MacGowan and, perhaps most surprisingly, Morrissey and Johnny Marr of The Smiths, that seemingly most English of pop groups. He sheds new light on their songs and on the strategies of protest, resistance and assimilation articulated therein. 'Irish Blood, English Heart' is a constantly intriguing and often provocative book about the complex process - and peculiar freedom - of not wholly belonging to one culture or the other.
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Noel McLaughlin
Co-author of Rock and Popular Music in Ireland
“This is an excellent piece of scholarship, offering an erudite mix of rigorous cultural history and insightful musical analysis. It is a major contribution to popular music scholarship generally and Irish popular music in particular. It very deftly opens up and gives critical texture to the complexities of the in-between spaces of the English/Irish musical world, and significantly forwards discussions of hybridity.
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Nabeel Zuberi
Author of 'Sounds English'
“This is a highly valuable book on the Irish diaspora and the politics of post-imperial popular culture in the UK. It reveals how Irish-English musicians struggled and succeeded in making the nation's multi-ethnic history and culture more audible and visible in a particularly inhospitable climate for the Irish. The book makes a significant contribution to the cultural history of the 1970s and 1980s, and contains lessons for the present in which England and the United Kingdom continue to fashion other "enemies within".
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