Description
Book SynopsisIn Women Singer-Songwriters in Rock: A Populist Rebellion in the 1990s, Ronald D. Lankford Jr. argues that women singer-songwriters formed a substantial movement within popular music during the 1990s, making a significant social and aesthetic contribution that pushed feminism into mainstream American culture. Lankford examines in depth the work of several artistsincluding Alanis Morissette, PJ Harvey, Liz Phair, Courtney Love, Tori Amos, Sarah McLachlan, and Sheryl Crowoffering thorough descriptions and analyses of their music, lyrics, and album art. By looking at both the broader movement and individual performers, this book provides a comprehensive and accessible overview of the movement and its message. Lankford introduces the singer-songwriter movement and the artists and genres that paved the way for these 1990s rockers, establishing the arch of the popular movement of women in rock as it mirrored the rise of third wave feminism and sketching the cultural and political landscape
Trade ReviewExtensively researched and endnoted, Lankford's book reads as much like a primer on third-wave (or 'lipstick') feminism as on the music and artists embodying it. . . . Lankford's book will serve as a definitive resource for women's studies as well as music history and popular culture programs on college campuses and it is broad enough in coverage and appeal to be of interest also to public library audiences. * American Reference Books Annual, May 2010 *
Fans of the individual artists will enjoy Lankford’s detailed discussions of their music, as will anyone who wants to understand this particular aspect of 1990s pop-music culture. * Booklist, March 2010 *