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Whose hometown? Reception of Bruce Springsteen as an index of Australian national identities

Version 2 2024-06-03, 14:14
Version 1 2015-12-03, 13:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-03, 14:14 authored by B Warren, Patrick WestPatrick West
Focusing on the cultural landscape of the mid-1980s, this paper explores the Australian experience of Bruce Springsteen. Australian author Peter Carey’s short story collection, The Fat Man in History, anticipates two phases of Australia’s relationship to the United States, phases expressed by responses to Springsteen’s Born in the U.S.A. (1984) and the 1986 blockbuster Crocodile Dundee. Springsteen’s album was received by an Australian audience who wanted to be like Americans; Crocodile Dundee, on the other hand, provided a representation of what Australians thought Americans wanted Australians to be. This paper argues that the first phase was driven by emergent technologies, in particular the Walkman, which allowed for personal and private listening practices. However, technological changes in the 1990s facilitated a more marked shift in listening space towards individualization, a change reflected in Springsteen’s lyrics.

History

Journal

BOSS: the biannual online-journal of Springsteen studies

Volume

1

Article number

3

Pagination

74-95

Location

Charlottesville, Va.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2016, The Authors

Issue

1

Publisher

University of Virginia

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