Chapter 10: Finding the Past in the Present and the Present in the Past
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Published:2019
Ruth Barratt-Peacock, Ross Hagen, Brenda S. Gardenour Walter, 2019. "Finding the Past in the Present and the Present in the Past", Medievalism and Metal Music Studies: Throwing Down the Gauntlet, Ruth Barratt-Peacock, Ross Hagen
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Abstract
In this chapter, the authors situate metal medievalism in the discourse on medievalism and neomedievalism. Detangling the ways in which historicity and authenticity are perceived and negotiated in metal cultures reveals how metal medievalism’s relationship to the past illuminates perceptions of post-modernity. The disparate pieces of the Middle Ages (both ‘real’ and ‘imagined’) form a bricolage through which post-modern meanings are expressed. Metal musicians and consumers use these fragments of the past as a means of collective resistance against the post-enlightenment, capitalist and machine-mediated present. The Middle Ages represent attempts at the re-enchantment of the present with a transcendent, organic, and carnal past. The meanings which are created this way are far from uniform or absolute however, but spiral between historical and imaginary, collective and individual, and continue to spin on in ever more complex permutations with no sign of abating.
