Description
Book SynopsisTyler Bickford traces the dramatic rise of the tween pop music industry, showing how it marshaled childishness as a key element in legitimizing children's participation in public culture.
Trade Review“A pathbreaking contribution that will reach and be relevant to a wide audience,
Tween Pop is the first book to treat the tween pop explosion of the 2000s as a cohesive phenomenon. I have no doubt that it will reach a wide audience while repositioning music as central to childhood studies and demanding for children's music a central place in the study of popular music as a whole.” -- Diane Pecknold, author of * The Selling Sound: The Rise of the Country Music Industry *
“Tyler Bickford masterfully describes a ‘tween moment’ in American public culture, examining those young music consumers who teeter between childhood and adolescence, and the attention of the popular music industry in reconceptualizing music for them in this critical growth stage. This highly original and ambitious book is a substantial contribution to ethnomusicology, sociology, media studies, education, and child studies, and convincingly clarifies the struggle of the culture industries to convert childhood into a cultural identity all its own.” -- Patricia Shehan Campbell, University of Washington
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Tween Pop offers valuable new directions in many areas across multiple disciplines. The scholarship here should remain beneficial for quite some time. . . . I urge readers to pick up this book now and make the most of it.” -- Christopher A. Medjesky * Journal of Popular Culture *
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Tween Pop is well-researched, expertly written, and thorough, and it includes supporting images. It is an essential text for those wanting to understand the important tween audience and its continuing impact on popular music.” -- Kathy Merlock Jackson * Journal of American Culture *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments vii
Introduction. The Tween Moment 1
1. Singing Along 41
2. Music Television 56
3. "Having It All" 87
4. The Whiteness of Tween Innocence 106
5. The Tween Prodigy at Home and Online 140
Conclusion. After the Tween Moment 167
Notes 187
References 197
Index 221