Daughters of Rock and Moms Who Rock: Rock Music as a Medium for Family Relationships in Portugal

This article discusses the role of rock musicking as a medium for family relationships. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with women who self-identify as rock music lovers, it analyses intergenerational rock musicking processes and informal learning. Music, together with other activities,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rita Grácio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra 2016-05-01
Series:Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rccs/6229
Description
Summary:This article discusses the role of rock musicking as a medium for family relationships. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with women who self-identify as rock music lovers, it analyses intergenerational rock musicking processes and informal learning. Music, together with other activities, aesthetic materials, technologies and narratives, is an essential element in family relationships and part of the parenting cultural toolkit, both for fathers, as the daughters remember and describe them, and for the mothers themselves. For women rock fans who become mothers, rock music articulates more empowering versions of maternal subjectivities, and specific settings – such as car journeys – can constitute “music asylums”. Taking two dyadic family relationships (father-daughter; mother-children), I argue that family and domestic spaces are relevant when analyzing everyday rock musicking.
ISSN:0254-1106
2182-7435