Christopher T. Conner is non-tenure track teaching assistant professor of sociology at the University of Missouri, Columbia. David R. Dickens was professor of sociology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas for thirty-eight years.
""Electronic Dance Music: From Deviant Subculture to Culture Industry is a thorough and scholarly work. In a series of three chronological essays, Conner and Dickens detail a full picture of the electronic music story, including its influences, technological components, characters, successes, and troubles. The book examines some of the little reported nuances of the industry related to culture, from its marginalization to eventual popularization."" --Donnie Estopinal, CEO, Disco Donnie Presents ""Making sense of and clearly mapping EDM's key historical transitions, Conner and Dickens have filled in gaps of much-needed research in dance music literature. In fun and accessible prose, we get rich and textured analyses of interviews with fans, promoters, and DJs, documents from industry insiders, and media portrayals of the subculture. Without a doubt, this book will be central to dance music debates and discussions for years to come."" --Danielle Antoinette Hidalgo, California State University, Chico ""This is a careful review of the rave scene and EDM culture as it has evolved over time. The authors should be commended for their astute sociological analysis, which should be helpful in college classrooms across the US."" --Tammy Anderson, University of Delaware Readers hoping for solutions to the problems of subcultural appropriation and the commodifying of resistance to the dominant social order may be left feeling disappointment, but that is arguably the authors' point. Rather than suggesting that solutions exist, Conner and Dickens use the concept of culture industry to systematically articulate how and why spaces of resistance are socially constructed and transformed into sources of marginalization for disenfranchised people and groups. [Any] weaknesses are, in truth, rather trivial when considering the book's important contributions to our sociological understandings of how culture is used to socially construct resistance as deviant and to undermine solidarity among marginalized groups. As such, it is very well suited for use in a variety of courses, including those that focus on cultural sociology, deviance, race, and Queer studies. -- ""Social Forces""