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- 34 - Communication, Cultural and Media Studies, Library and Information Management
- Submitting institution
- University of East London
- Unit of assessment
- 34 - Communication, Cultural and Media Studies, Library and Information Management
- Summary impact type
- Cultural
- Is this case study continued from a case study submitted in 2014?
- No
1. Summary of the impact
Lawrence’s three monographs on the history of New York City’s music and art scenes during the 1970s/early 1980s have transformed the understanding of the period within the United States and beyond. The research narrates and analyses neglected forms of expression largely produced by a cross-class coalition of people of colour, the LGBT+ community and women, explaining the culture’s importance. The research significantly shaped three key areas: creativity, culture and society; commerce and the economy; and understanding, learning and participation. In particular, it has stimulated the widespread uptake of party practices associated with David Mancuso’s Loft.
2. Underpinning research
The three monographs by Professor Lawrence amount to a comprehensive, unparalleled 1,500-page study of music, party and art culture in late twentieth century New York City. Early into researching a history of dance music intended to begin in mid-1980s Chicago, Lawrence interviewed Loft party host David Mancuso, unrecognised and out of time, for background information, only for Mancuso to introduce him to the unnarrated, subterranean history of downtown party culture. Responding to the lack of scholarship on the city’s rich history, Lawrence published a 500-page book on the evolution of dance/disco culture during the 1970s that pivoted around Mancuso’s transformative contribution, followed by two more books on New York music, party and art culture during the 1970s and early 1980s. His research repositions New York City 1970-83 as the most influential centre for cultural production in the 20th century—and not the dysfunctional failure it is routinely claimed to have been.
Love saves the day: a history of American dance music culture, 1970-1979 ( R1) established the unparalleled, pioneering contribution of David Mancuso and the Loft to the emergence of DJing as a new form of democratic musicianship, the introduction of high-end ‘audiophile’ components into public sound systems, and the refiguring of the dance floor as a utopian space of community, expression and refuge for a rainbow coalition of dancers made up of people of colour, the LGBT+ community, women and their friends. The monograph also confronted the popular belief that disco amounted to a crass, tasteless culture deserving of ridicule by detailing and analysing its sonically and socially progressive contribution. Hold on to your dreams: Arthur Russell and the downtown music scene, 1973-1992 ( R2) amounted to an ‘anti-biography biography’ of the then little-known yet significant composer-musician Arthur Russell that tracked his nomadic wanderings to excavate and map previously overlooked connections between downtown’s compositional, disco, hip hop and punk scenes. Life and death on the New York dance floor, 1980-1983 ( R3, G1) argued that the unprecedented output and interaction that took place within and between the city’s downtown art, music, party and performance scenes amounted to one of the most important cultural renaissances of the 20th century.
Lawrence’s sweeping analysis is rooted in comprehensive research that focuses on the marginalised, intersectional, countercultural voices of the city’s creative communities. He interviewed 267 protagonists ( R1 89 interviewees, R2 82 interviewees, R3 99 interviewees) plus constructed a unique archive from disparate, often ephemeral sources featuring niche publications, fanzines, flyers, playlists and technical information. Including more than 270 illustrations and 40 discographies, the monographs have established a form of community history writing that is as accessible as it is rigorous. Lawrence’s re-historicisation of 1970s/early 1980s NYC as an epicentre for collective creativity—from the social impact of audiophile dance floors to the prolific alliances forged within and between the art and party scenes—has instilled the history with a new cultural vitality and relevance.
3. References to the research
R1. 2004. Love saves the day: a history of American dance music culture, 1970-1979. Duke University Press. Translated into Italian and Japanese.
R2. 2009. Hold on to your dreams: Arthur Russell and the downtown music scene, 1973-1992. Duke University Press. Translated into Italian and Japanese.
R3. 2016. Life and death on the New York dance floor, 1980-1983. Duke University Press.
G1. Tim Lawrence, Research Leave for Life and death on the New York dance floor, 1980-1983, AHRC, 2009, GBP26,258.
4. Details of the impact
Audiophile dance parties and creative practice
Figure 1 Map of Audiophile Events and Parties
Lawrence’s Love saves the day has inspired, co-created and supported new forms of social expression by becoming the inspirational reference point for a mushrooming, international network of audiophile dance parties that model themselves on the Loft. The research led David Mancuso to invite Lawrence to co-host Loft-style parties in London featuring a newly assembled audiophile sound system, unique in Europe.
Beginning in 2003, the London party is held quarterly (until lockdown 2020) and attracts 400 dancers per event. The London template has been replicated by 15 UK and 12 European parties, each contributing to social and community regeneration (S1). Often referred to as a ‘bible’ by participants, the research also led to the opening of Classic Album Sundays, a London-based audiophile listening event that runs 13 franchises in 7 countries, as well as 7 audiophile bars that feature Loft-style sound systems (S2).
Figure 2 All Our Friends Loft-style audiophile party, 2018
Lawrence’s research has also generated new ways of thinking that have influenced creative practice in art, music, television and film. Love saves the day (R1) inspired New York artist Martin Beck to create a series of Loft-inspired works for his major retrospective at Mumok, Vienna, 2017 ; Artforum hailed the works in its end-of-year review. Musicians ranging from internationally-acclaimed Venezuelan electronic music artist Arca to lead vocalist for dance-pop act the Scissor Sisters Ana Matronic have cited Lawrence’s research (R1, R2, R3) as a key inspiration (S3). It has been used as a source of information about NYC culture by the producers of The Deuce (HBO, 2017-19), The Get Down (Netflix, 2016-17) and Empires of New York (CNBC, 2020) as well as Studio 54, an official selection at the Sundance Film Festival (2018).
Public understanding of New York history
Lawrence’s research has reshaped public understanding of 1970s/early 1980s New York City culture, enabling library and museum professionals to enhance cultural heritage preservation and interpretation. Underpinning the popular uptake of his research, Duke UP has sold 30,000 copies of Lawrence’s books since 2014.
Figure 3 Ana Matronic interviewing Lawrence for her new podcast, “Tales from the dance floor”, 2020.
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Centre relied on Lawrence’s Arthur Russell biography (R2) to acquire and organise Russell’s archive in May 2016 (S4). The research has underscored major international art shows at the Barbican, the Museum of Modern Art, the Vancouver Art Gallery and the Vitra Design Museum as well as numerous shows curated by smaller galleries (S6). The chief curator for MoMA’s Club 57: film, performance and art in the East Village exhibition notes the research (R1, R2, R3) “mapped the terrain”, “shaped our approach” and “became a spiritual guide”; MoMA invited Lawrence to host a panel discussion/screening of Downtown 81 (attended by 400, viewed online by 9,000) (S7). The Barbican’s Basquiat: boom for real show employed Lawrence as a consulting curator, workshop convenor, screening chair, writer and themed concert curator (S8).
Challenging conventional wisdom, the research’s conclusions have been cited extensively as source material by journalists working for major outlets (including broadcasters BBC Radio 1, 2, 4 and 6, Channel 4, NPR and Sky Arts, and publications the Guardian, the Independent, the New Yorker, the New York Post, the New York Times, the TLS, Vogue Hommes and the Wall Street Journal) as well as scores of book authors, specialist publications and websites (S9). The research has also provided content for arts organisations, music/web-based SMEs and corporations to reuse in their own projects. For instance, the co-director of the award-winning NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project describes Lawrence’s research as “an invaluable resource” for mapping LGBT spaces (S5). In 2018 the Journal of the Society for American Music described the research, taught in numerous Ivy League and state universities in the United States, as a “great service to US music studies” (S10).
Paying participants, employment and sales
The research has inspired the creation of new businesses, fee-paying shows and products. The parties, bars and events cited above have entertained hundreds of thousands of paying participants while creating employment. For example, the research-inspired audiophile bar/sushi restaurant/dance spot Brilliant Corners employed 20 staff and attracted approximately 15,000 customers a year pre-covid ( S1b). The museum shows reliant on the research have generated substantial income through ticket sales. The Basquiat show attracted 216,389 visitors—a record for the Barbican—while Lawrence’s themed concert drew a capacity crowd of 2,000. Reappearing Records, formed to re-release research-related music, has sold 5,000 albums.
5. Sources to corroborate the impact
S1a. Chats Palace, a historical working-class theatre/community centre located in Hackney, receives c. £40,000/year from All Our Friends.
S1b. Brilliant Corner figures confirmed in an email from owner Amit Patel, 26 November 2020. Shortly before opening Patel wrote to Lawrence: “We might not have taken on this venue were it not for the music, sound systems and parties that have inspired us over the years. Your books and the [Loft] parties at the Light are very much part of that inspiration”, 24 October 2013.
S2: Articles such as:
S2a. Frederick Bernas, “Listening clubs tantalise audiophiles in London”, the New York Times, 31 October 2016, https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/31/arts/music/london-listening-clubs-spiritland.html.
S2b. Tom Faber, “From the Loft to the sky: the story of Lucky Cloud Sound System”, Resident Advisor, 19 January 2018. https://ra.co/features/3123
S2c. Nosheen Iqba l,“Shush… and enjoy the music: how listening bars have hit the right note”, the Guardian, 8 December 2019, https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/dec/08/music-listening-bars-albums-high-quality
S3a: Emilie Friedlander, “Arca Finds Xen”, Fader, June/July 2017, recounts that after reading Lawrence’s Hold on to your dreams ( R2). “[Alejandro] Ghersi experienced something of an artistic breakthrough, and Arca was born.”
S3b. Ana Matronic has a copy of Love saves the day ( R1) hanging on her wall as a source of ‘inspiration’.
S4: Jonathan Hiam, curator at the American Music Collection and the Rodgers and Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, oversaw the purchase of the Arthur Russell archive in May 2016. He informed Lawrence that: " Hold on to your dreams has been an incredible resource for all of us here at NYPL as well as pretty much anyone who is interested in the life and legacy of Arthur Russell. Personally, I'm on my second copy having worn through the first.” The Brooklyn Academy of Music staged a simultaneous show and linked event series, “Do What I Want: Selections from the Arthur Russell Papers”, 1 March -14 May 2017.
S5: NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project website, https://www.nyclgbtsites.org
S6: Barbican, Basquiat: boom for real, 21 September 2017-28 January 2018; Museum of Modern Art, Club 57: film, performance, and art in the East Village, 1978-1983, 31 October 2017-8 April 2018; Vitra Design Museum, Night fever: a design history of the disco, 17 March-9 September 2018; Brussels Design Museum, 21 November 2018-5 May 2019, Centro Pecci Italy,17 June-13 October 2019; Design Museum Denmark, 25 January-1 June 2020; and Vancouver Art Gallery, MashUp: the birth of modern culture, 20 February-15 May 2016. Other exhibitions inspired by Lawrence’s research include: The Red Gallery, Creativity, collectivity, convergence: New York City party culture, 1970-83, 31 May-14 June 2018; Steven Harvey Fine Art Projects, Paradise: underground culture in NYC 1978-83, 12 October-13 November 2016; Howl Gallery, The downtown scene photography show, 8 October 2016; and Morrison Hotel Gallery Disco at 50, 14 February-15 March 2020. Lawrence provided consultancy for the Museum of Sex show New York disco, 1977-79.
S7: Video recording of MoMA’s downtown panel, curated and chaired by Lawrence, 13 October 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D818wg1gVCk&t=904s
S8: Tim Lawrence, “Basquiat and Downtown”, Barbican, 1 September 2017, http://sites.barbican.org.uk/basquiatdowntown/
S9: Three examples include: Jesse Jarnow, 2016, Heads: a biography of psychedelic America (New York: Da Capo Press); Julie Ault, “Steven Evans: if I can’t dance, it’s not my revolution”, exhibition catalogue, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, 29 June-13 October 2019; and Red Bull Music Academy’s website https://www.redbullmusicacademy.com, which includes numerous references to Lawrence’s research plus links to RBMA YouTube research playlists.
S10: Louis Niebuer, 2018. “Life and death on the New York dance floor, 1980-1983," Journal of the Society for American Music, 12(4), 511-13.
- Submitting institution
- University of East London
- Unit of assessment
- 34 - Communication, Cultural and Media Studies, Library and Information Management
- Summary impact type
- Societal
- Is this case study continued from a case study submitted in 2014?
- No
1. Summary of the impact
Jeremy Gilbert’s widely circulated political and cultural commentary has been cited as influential by journalists, MPs, and key figures at prominent think tanks, NGOs and campaigning organisations. As a significant public intellectual, his commentary and podcasting have shaped and influenced the thinking of tens of thousands of readers and listeners. This influence is underpinned by two decades of research into contemporary politics, culture, and social theory.
2. Underpinning research
Gilbert’s research into contemporary politics and culture, social movements, and political theory over the last two decades has investigated a number of consistent themes. At a conceptual and analytic level, it has sought to continue the tradition of ‘conjunctural analysis’ associated with the classic tradition of British cultural studies, bringing to bear a historical, sociological and critical perspective on emergent social and political phenomena. It presents an historically informed understanding of contemporary culture, politics, and society, interrogating the complex relationships between social, technological, economic, and political change.
Of most relevance to the wider impact of the academic work, are two central theses:
That, in approaching contemporary social problems and forms of political organization, it is necessary to prioritise democratic methods and aspirations.
That organizations and individuals committed to progressive ends should collaborate and coordinate their activities to achieve realistic objectives, overcoming sectarian and organizational divisions between ‘party’ and ‘movement’ politics, and between representatives of different political traditions (including liberal, socialist, anarchist, green).
This research argues that cultural studies itself needs to be understood as a critical practice with an explicitly public and democratic vocation. Gilbert’s positions were initially laid out in the co-edited collection Cultural capitalism (R1) and developed in Anticapitalism and culture* (R2). This book situated the practice of contemporary cultural studies in the broad history of Anglophone progressive politics and argued for a realignment of forces on the left of British politics. It suggested that alliances between radical movements engaged in extra-parliamentary activity and the institutions of electoral politics, most notably the Labour Party, were key to political progress, at a time when any such development seemed highly unlikely.
These ideas were further developed in Common ground (R3)**, wherein he argued for contemporary politics combining with radical democratic aspirations, sympathy for the tradition of cultural radicalism, and a willingness to challenge the neoliberal political consensus. Gilbert investigated the political implications of contemporary and classical theories of individuation, collective agency, and affect. His formulation of an ethic of ‘collective joy’ in that work has since been taken up by activists and commentators. Neoliberal culture (R4) is a collection, edited and with an introduction (p5-6) and a chapter (p7-22: “ What Kind of Thing is ‘Neoliberalism’?”) by Gilbert, analysing the nature and scope of neoliberalism as a political project, suggesting important parameters for conceptualizing alternatives to it.
Gilbert’s own analysis of the current socio-cultural conjuncture was most fully articulated in his essay “ This conjuncture: for Stuart Hall” (R5) which develops his concept of the ‘long 90s’ (first proposed in a keynote paper given at the University of Leeds, 2015 subsequently published on Gilbert’s blog). Twenty-first-century socialism (R6) condenses and summarises many of the findings and arguments developed in this work for a wider, non-academic readership, as have his many contributions to outlets such as open Democracy and the Guardian.
3. References to the research
R1. Bewes, T., Gilbert, J. and Bewes, J. eds., 2000. Cultural Capitalism: Politics after New Labour. Lawrence & Wishart Limited.
R2. Gilbert, J., 2008. Anticapitalism and culture: Radical theory and popular politics (p. 224). Berg Publishers.
R3. Gilbert, J., 2013. Common ground: Democracy and collectivity in an age of individualism. Pluto Press.
R4. Gilbert, J., 2016. Neoliberal culture. Lawrence & Wishart.
R5. Gilbert, J., 2019. This Conjuncture: For Stuart Hall. New Formations, 96(96-97), pp.5-37. https://doi.org/10.3898/NEWF:96/97.EDITORIAL.2019
R6. Gilbert, J., 2020. Twenty-First Century Socialism. John Wiley & Sons.
4. Details of the impact
“Jeremy has played a significant role in British public life for many years now; in fact, it is hard to think of many currently working academics who have so consistently bridged the gaps between activism, academic theory and public-facing commentary.” Jon Cruddas, Labour MP ( S1)
Influencing campaigning groups, think-tanks, and politicians.
Both of his books, Common Ground and Twenty-first-century Socialism, have been cited as influential by municipal and national elected representatives, senior figures at think-tanks and NGOs, and activists and political organisers:
Neal Lawson, director of Compass, wrote: “ As a leading advocate for pluralist and radical democratic politics … he has been a direct influence on some of Compass’ key political decisions: e.g., our decision to persistently focus on democratisation of public services and governmental institutions as a key political objective, and our 2017 campaign for a ‘progressive alliance’ of British political parties. His pamphlet Reclaim Modernity, co-authored with Mark Fisher and published by us in 2015 ( S2), remains foundational to all of our thinking on contemporary politics and culture’, and his 2017 pamphlet on coalitions ‘directly inspired several and successful significant local campaigns during that election.” ( S3)
Mathew Lawrence, Institute for Public Policy Research and Common Wealth (think-tanks): “Jeremy's work was hugely influential on our programme of work [at IPPR] exploring political inequality in the UK and how to build a more participative 21st century democracy. Latterly, his work [… has] underpinned a new organisation I founded in 2019, Common Wealth, which was set up to design ownership models for a democratic economy.” ( S4)
Gilbert has been an informal advisor to prominent Labour MPs including Jon Cruddas, Jon Trickett, Sam Tarry and Clive Lewis, and to some of the most senior parliamentary advisors to the party leadership **shaping political debate (**e.g., S1, S5).
“I’ve been consistently influenced, and often directly guided, by Jeremy Gilbert’s thinking and analysis. My critical support for Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party, but also for causes such as the Green New Deal, electoral reform and pluralist, multi-party politics have all been directly influenced by his writing” Clive Lewis, Labour MP (S5).
During his campaign for the party leadership in 2020, Lewis spoke through national media outlets about the need to address the UK’s ‘crisis of democracy’; a phrase derived directly from Common Ground ( S6a).
Engagement with public discourse
Gilbert’s work has helped to shape and inform public attitudes and values , enhancing cultural understanding, challenging conventional wisdom, and stimulating debate.
Extensively cited and interviewed by journalists and commentators in The Guardian, New Statesman and Financial Times, and named by several journalists from The Guardian as a key figure on the British Left. (S6a-e).
Work on radical democracy, the legacy of the counterculture, and ‘collective joy’ in culture, music and politics generated a flurry of press interest and interviews in the national and international press 2017-2019 (S7) and invitations to contribute to formal discussions of public policy issues ( S8a-b), as well as a popular podcast on the successful media platform Novara Media, with a lively and dedicated following. The podcasts received 15-20,000 listeners per episode, representing a significant contribution to public debate (S9).
The ‘Culture, Power and Politics’ series of lectures, of which he is a principal organizer and presenter, reach a diverse audience outside the academy. He delivers lectures at the Ridley Road Market Bar (49 Ridley Road, Dalston, London, E8 2NP) and they are also podcast. Simon Jarvis of Bristol says: “ As a construction worker with no graduate qualifications, the recorded Culture, Power, Politics lectures have been an invaluable resource for me. Having access to free left-wing teaching of such a high standard has given me the confidence and the inspiration to become Political Education Officer for my local Labour Party. As well as delivering and running training sessions I have been directly inspired by Jeremy to run reading groups and to take a ‘consciousness raising’ style approach to debates and other political education events .” (S10)
5. Sources to corroborate the impact
S1. Testimonial statement from Labour MP Jon Cruddas.
S2. Fisher, M. and Gilbert, J. 2014. Reclaim modernity: beyond markets beyond machines. Compass. Report. https://www.compassonline.org.uk/publications/reclaiming-modernity-beyond-markets-beyond-machines/
S3. Testimonial statement from Neal Lawson, Executive Director, Compass.
S4. Testimonial statement from Mathew Lawrence, formerly Institute for Public Policy Research, founder and director of Common Wealth .
S5. Testimonial statement from Labour MP Clive Lewis.
S6. Examples of media coverage of Gilbert’s position:
S6a. Heather Stewart. 2020. Clive Lewis: to beat Tories, Labour has to work with other progressives. The Guardian. http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/jan/07/clive-lewis-to-beat-tories-labour-has-to-work-with-other-progressives
S6b. Aditya Chakrabortty. 2015. Jeremy Corbyn’s politics of hope can seize power from the elite. The Guardian. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/sep/14/jeremy-corbyn-austerity-labour-leader-economy
S6c. George Monbiot. 2016. Labour can still survive, but only if it abandons hope of governing alone. The Guardian. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/jul/05/labour-survive-governing-alone-political-alliance-unity-british-left-power
S6d. Joshua Chaffin. 2017. Generational guilt’ attracts older voters to Labour. The Financial Times. https://www.ft.com/content/9326600e-c498-11e7-b2bb-322b2cb39656
S6e. George Eaton. 2018. The meaning of Corbynism. The New Statesman. https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2018/03/meaning-corbynism
S7. Casper Hughes C. 2018. Acid Corbynism: Why we need to create a new counterculture. The Independent. https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/acid-corbynism-labour-jeremy-corbyn-counterculture-a8231936.html
S8a. Gilbert, J. 2019. Education for a Healthy Democracy. Institute for Public Policy Research. future-of-education-sept19.pdf (ippr.org)
S8b. Jeremy Gilbert. 2019. “The only way Labour can win is by ditching Labourism.” The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/31/only-way-labour-win-ditch-labourism-corbyn (1,753 comments, 669 shares)
S9. Media platform, Novara Media. https://novaramedia.com/2020/03/01/acfm-microdose-musical-cities/
S10. Testimonial statement from Simon Jarvis, regular listener of the Culture, Power and Politics series of seminars and podcasts. Event list: Ridley Road Market Bar