Mixing Pop and Politics: Music and Marxism with Toby Manning

Talks & Debates
Promotional poster for a launch event titled "Mixing Pop and Politics" on Thursday, 23 May at 7 PM. Features live DJ and free entry. Poster includes an abstract graphic design.

Repeater Books and Pelican House present an evening with Toby Manning, to launch his latest book “Mixing Pop and Politics: A Marxist History of Popular Music”. The night will start with a talk from Toby, and then a live DJ spinning tracks from across the encyclopaedic ensemble of the book itself.

Mixing Pop and Politics is not a history of political music, but a political history of popular music. Spanning the early 50s to the present, it shows how, from doo-wop to hip-hop, punk to crunk and grunge to grime, music has both reflected and resisted the political events of its era. Mixing Pop and Politics explores the connections between popular music and political ideology, whether that’s the liberation of rock’n’roll or the containment of girl groups, the refusal of glam or the resignation of soft rock, the solidarity of disco or the individualism of 80s pop.

At a time when reactionary forces are waging political war in the realm of culture, and we’re being told to keep politics out of music, Mixing Pop and Politics is a timely, original and joyful exploration of popular music’s role in our society.

Repeater Books and Pelican House present an evening with Toby Manning, to launch his latest book “Mixing Pop and Politics: A Marxist History of Popular Music”. The night will start with a talk from Toby, and then a live DJ spinning tracks from across the encyclopaedic ensemble of the book itself.

Mixing Pop and Politics is not a history of political music, but a political history of popular music. Spanning the early 50s to the present, it shows how, from doo-wop to hip-hop, punk to crunk and grunge to grime, music has both reflected and resisted the political events of its era. Mixing Pop and Politics explores the connections between popular music and political ideology, whether that’s the liberation of rock’n’roll or the containment of girl groups, the refusal of glam or the resignation of soft rock, the solidarity of disco or the individualism of 80s pop.

At a time when reactionary forces are waging political war in the realm of culture, and we’re being told to keep politics out of music, Mixing Pop and Politics is a timely, original and joyful exploration of popular music’s role in our society.