Lipstick Traces  

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 +"[[Popular culture|Pop culture]] - the [[folk culture]] of the modern market, the culture of the instant, at once subsuming past and future and refusing to acknowledge the reality of either - began about [[1948]], in the United States and Great Britain." --''[[Lipstick Traces]]'' (1989) by Greil Marcus, p. 257.
 +<hr>
 +"[[Mémoires|It]] was the [[secret history]] of a time that had passed —“without leaving a trace,” said the next to last page." --''[[Lipstick Traces]]'' (1989) by Greil Marcus, p. 153.
 +<hr>
 +"The first 125 pages of the book concern the Sex Pistols rise and rapid self destruction. Johnny Rotten's snarling first lines to "[[Anarchy in the UK]]" (I am an anti-Christ, I am an anarchist) are [[watchword]]s for this dense but beautifully written tome. So many absolutely delightful and surprising twists and turns occur in this narrative to make it an absolutely unmatched as a work of lyrical non-fiction. The book took Marcus nine years to write."[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lipstick_Traces:_A_Secret_History_of_the_20th_Century&oldid=4127272]
 +|}
 +
[[Image:Gheerhaets Allegory iconoclasm.jpg|200px|thumb|This page ''{{PAGENAME}}'' is a part of the [[protestantism]] series. [[Image:Gheerhaets Allegory iconoclasm.jpg|200px|thumb|This page ''{{PAGENAME}}'' is a part of the [[protestantism]] series.
<br> <br>
<small>Illustration: ''[[The image breakers]]'', c.[[1566]] –[[1568]] by [[Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder]]</small>]] <small>Illustration: ''[[The image breakers]]'', c.[[1566]] –[[1568]] by [[Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder]]</small>]]
-[[Image:Carte du tendre.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The ''[[Map of Tendre]]'' (''Carte du Tendre'')]]+[[Image:Carte du tendre.jpg|thumb|right|200px|The ''[[Map of Tendre]]'' (''Carte du Tendre''), as featured in the anonymous article "Unitary Urbanism at the End of the 1950s," ('L'urbanisme unitaire a la fin des années 50' [[Internationale Situationniste]] no.3, December 1959, the article also featured [[The Naked City (Guy Debord)|''The Naked City'' by Debord]]]]
{{Template}} {{Template}}
'''''Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century''''' (1989) is a [[cultural history]] book by American writer [[Greil Marcus]]. It examines [[popular music]] and [[art]] as a [[Social criticism|social critique]] of [[Western culture]]. '''''Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century''''' (1989) is a [[cultural history]] book by American writer [[Greil Marcus]]. It examines [[popular music]] and [[art]] as a [[Social criticism|social critique]] of [[Western culture]].
-The book covers 20th century [[avant-garde]] art movements like [[Dadaism]], [[Lettrist International]] and [[Situationist International]] and their influence on late [[20th century]] [[counterculture]]s, [[The Sex Pistols]] and the [[Punk subculture|punk]] movement in general. Another part of the work is the tracing of the philosophical roots of the 20th century avant-garde in the [[heresy|medieval "heresies"]] of the [[Cathars]] and the [[Anabaptism|anabaptists]].+The book covers 20th century [[avant-garde]] art movements like [[Dada|Dadaism]], [[Lettrism|Lettrist International]] and [[Situationist International]] and their influence on late [[20th century]] [[counterculture]]s, [[Sex Pistols|The Sex Pistols]] and the [[Punk subculture|punk]] movement in general. Another part of the work is the tracing of the philosophical roots of the 20th century avant-garde in the [[heresy|medieval "heresies"]] of the [[Catharism|Cathars]] and the [[Anabaptism|anabaptists]].
A "soundtrack" to ''Lipstick Traces'', compiling many of the songs referenced in the book, was released by [[Rough Trade Records]] in 1993. A "soundtrack" to ''Lipstick Traces'', compiling many of the songs referenced in the book, was released by [[Rough Trade Records]] in 1993.
-==Citations==+ 
-:"[[Pop culture]] - the [[folk culture]] of the modern market, the culture of the instant, at once subsuming past and future and refusing to acknowledge the reality of either - began about [[1948]], in the United States and Great Britain." --p. 257.+
== From the back cover == == From the back cover ==
Greil Marcus, from the back cover: Greil Marcus, from the back cover:
Line 16: Line 24:
:This book is about a single, [[serpentine]] fact: late in 1976 a record called "[[Anarchy in the U.K.]]" was issued in London, and this event launched a transformation of [[pop music]] all over the world. Made by a four-man rock 'n' roll band called the [[Sex Pistols]], and written by singer [[Johnny Rotten]], the song distilled, in [[crude]]ly [[poetic]] form, a [[critique]] of [[modern society]] once set out by a small group of [[French Theory|Paris-based intellectuals]]. First organized in 1952 as the [[Lettrist International]], and refounded in 1957 at a conference of [[European avant-garde]] artists as the [[Situationist International]], the group gained its greatest [[notoriety]] during the [[May 68|French revolt of May 1968]], when the premises of its critique were distilled into crudely poetic slogans and [[Graffiti|spray-painted across the walls]] of Paris, after which the critique was given up to history and the group disappeared. The group looked back to the [[surrealists]] of the 1920s, the [[dadaists]] who made their names during and just after the First World War, the young [[Karl Marx]],[[ Saint-Just]], various [[medieval heretics]], and the [[Knights of the Round Table]]. :This book is about a single, [[serpentine]] fact: late in 1976 a record called "[[Anarchy in the U.K.]]" was issued in London, and this event launched a transformation of [[pop music]] all over the world. Made by a four-man rock 'n' roll band called the [[Sex Pistols]], and written by singer [[Johnny Rotten]], the song distilled, in [[crude]]ly [[poetic]] form, a [[critique]] of [[modern society]] once set out by a small group of [[French Theory|Paris-based intellectuals]]. First organized in 1952 as the [[Lettrist International]], and refounded in 1957 at a conference of [[European avant-garde]] artists as the [[Situationist International]], the group gained its greatest [[notoriety]] during the [[May 68|French revolt of May 1968]], when the premises of its critique were distilled into crudely poetic slogans and [[Graffiti|spray-painted across the walls]] of Paris, after which the critique was given up to history and the group disappeared. The group looked back to the [[surrealists]] of the 1920s, the [[dadaists]] who made their names during and just after the First World War, the young [[Karl Marx]],[[ Saint-Just]], various [[medieval heretics]], and the [[Knights of the Round Table]].
-:My conviction is that such circumstances are primarily [[odd]]. For a [[gnomic]], [[gnostic]] critique dreamed up by a handful of [[Left Bank]] [[Parisian cafe|cafe]] prophets to reappear a quarter-century later, to make the charts, and then to come to life as a whole new set of demands on culture—this is almost transcendently odd.+:My conviction is that such circumstances are primarily [[odd]]. For a [[gnomic]], [[gnostic]] critique dreamed up by a handful of [[Rive Gauche|Left Bank]] [[Parisian cafe|cafe]] prophets to reappear a quarter-century later, to make the charts, and then to come to life as a whole new set of demands on culture—this is almost transcendently odd.
==Table of Contents== ==Table of Contents==
*Prologue *Prologue
Line 33: Line 41:
**Acknowledgments **Acknowledgments
**Index **Index
 +==Linking in in 2023==
 +[[Bascom Lamar Lunsford]], [[Bootleg Retrospective]], [[Deena Weinstein]], [[Dennis Morris (photographer)]], [[Greil Marcus]], [[I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground]], [[Letterist International]], [[Lettrism]], [[Lipstick Traces (A Secret History of Manic Street Preachers)]], [[Lipstick Traces (on a Cigarette)]], [[Matthew Earnest]], [[Notre-Dame Affair]], [[On the Poverty of Student Life]], [[Punk visual art]], [[Recuperation (politics)]], [[Ripley's Believe It or Not! (1982 TV series)]], [[Roadrunner (Jonathan Richman song)]], [[Situationist International]], [[The Plot to Blow Up the Eiffel Tower]].
 +
 +==Partial list of illustrations==
 +*Cover: photo of [[Johnny Rotten]] by [[Kevin Cummins (photographer)]]
 +*Photograph of the corpse of [[Rosa Luxemburg]] was published in [[King Mob Echo]], and is published in ''[[Lipstick Traces]]'', p.117.
 +*[[Guy Debord]]’s - [[The Naked City (Guy Debord)|The Naked City ]] (1957)
 +*“It’s that shabby old man with the tin whistle!”, “I yam an [[Anti-Christ]]!” by [[Ray Lowry]] in the the 19 May 1984 issue of the [[NME]],
 +*"[[Storefront of Doom]]" comic strip, [[L. A. Reader]] (3 August 1984), copyright © 1984 by Matt Groening
 +
 +==Soundtrack==
 +A soundtrack to the book was released in 1993 on [[Rough Trade Records]].
 +
 +• [[The Slits]] - [[A Boring Life]]
 +• [[The Orioles]] - [[It's Too Soon To Know]]
 +• [[Tristan Tzara]], [[Marcel Janco]], [[Richard Huelsenbeck]] - [[L 'Amiral cherche une maison a louer]]
 +• [[Jonathan Richman]] - [[Road Runner]]
 +• [[Guy Debord]] - Excerpt from soundtrack to [[Hurlements en faveur de Sade]]
 +• [[The Roxy]], London - [[Ambience]]
 +• [[Jean-Louis Brau]] - [[Instrumentation Verbale]] (Side 2)
 +• [[The Buzzcocks]] - [[Boredom]]
 +• [[The Adverts]] - [[One Chord Wonders]]
 +• [[Raoul Hausmann]] - [[phoneme bbbb]]
 +• [[Gang of Four (band)|Gang of Four]] - [[At Home He's A Tourist]]
 +• [[The Adverts]] - [[Gary Gilmore's Eyes]]
 +• [[Kleenex]] - [[U (angry side)]]
 +• [[Guy Debord]] - Excerpt from soundtrack to [[Critique de la separation]]
 +• [[The Clash]] - [[Stage talk, Roundhouse, London, 9/23/76]]
 +• [[The Mekons]] - [[Never Been In A Riot]]
 +• [[Liliput]] - [[Split]]
 +• [[Peter Blegvad]], et all - [[rohrenhose-rokoko-neger-rhythmus]]
 +• [[Essential Logic]] - [[Wake Up]]
 +• [[Kleenex]] - [[You (friendly side)]]
 +• [[Gil J. Wolman]] - [[Megapneumies, 3/24/63]] (Side 1)
 +• [[The Raincoats]] - [[In Love]]
 +• [[Guy Debord]] - Excerpt from soundtrack to [[Hurlements en faveur de Sade]]
 +• [[Marie Osmond]] - [[Karawane]]
 +• [[Bascom Lamar Lunsford]] - [[I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground]]
 +• [[The Mekons]] - [[The Building]]
 +• [[Benny Spellman]] - [[Lipstick Traces (On a Cigarette)]]
 +
== See also == == See also ==
-* [[Peter Schneider (writer)]]+;Main fields
-*[[20th century]]+*[[History of Western subcultures in the 20th-century]]
*[[Secret history]] *[[Secret history]]
-*[[Notre-Dame Affair]] 
-*''[[Ocean of Sound]]'' by David Toop, a similar work in its [[wide-ranging]] scope 
*[[May 1968 events in France]] *[[May 1968 events in France]]
 +;Similar
 +*''[[Ocean of Sound]]'' by David Toop, a similar work in its [[wide-ranging]] scope
 +
 +;Names mentioned
 +* [[Peter Schneider (writer)]]
 +*[[Notre-Dame Affair]]
 +*[[Ray Lowry]]
 +*[[John of Leyden]]
*[[Simon Goddard]] *[[Simon Goddard]]
*[[Bascom Lamar Lunsford]] *[[Bascom Lamar Lunsford]]
Line 46: Line 101:
*[[Recuperation (politics)]] *[[Recuperation (politics)]]
*[[Roadrunner (Jonathan Richman song)]] *[[Roadrunner (Jonathan Richman song)]]
-*[[Matthew Earnest]] 
*[[I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground]] *[[I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground]]
*[[Dennis Morris (photographer)]] *[[Dennis Morris (photographer)]]
-*[[On the Poverty of Student Life]]+*''[[Quatermass and the Pit (film)|Quatermass and the Pit]]''
 +*"[[On the Poverty of Student Life]]"
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}
 +[[Category:WLL]]

Current revision

"Pop culture - the folk culture of the modern market, the culture of the instant, at once subsuming past and future and refusing to acknowledge the reality of either - began about 1948, in the United States and Great Britain." --Lipstick Traces (1989) by Greil Marcus, p. 257.


"It was the secret history of a time that had passed —“without leaving a trace,” said the next to last page." --Lipstick Traces (1989) by Greil Marcus, p. 153.


"The first 125 pages of the book concern the Sex Pistols rise and rapid self destruction. Johnny Rotten's snarling first lines to "Anarchy in the UK" (I am an anti-Christ, I am an anarchist) are watchwords for this dense but beautifully written tome. So many absolutely delightful and surprising twists and turns occur in this narrative to make it an absolutely unmatched as a work of lyrical non-fiction. The book took Marcus nine years to write."[1]

This page Lipstick Traces is a part of the protestantism series.  Illustration: The image breakers, c.1566 –1568 by Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder
Enlarge
This page Lipstick Traces is a part of the protestantism series.
Illustration: The image breakers, c.15661568 by Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder
The Map of Tendre (Carte du Tendre), as featured in the anonymous article "Unitary Urbanism at the End of the 1950s," ('L'urbanisme unitaire a la fin des années 50' Internationale Situationniste no.3, December 1959, the article also featured The Naked City by Debord
Enlarge
The Map of Tendre (Carte du Tendre), as featured in the anonymous article "Unitary Urbanism at the End of the 1950s," ('L'urbanisme unitaire a la fin des années 50' Internationale Situationniste no.3, December 1959, the article also featured The Naked City by Debord

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Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century (1989) is a cultural history book by American writer Greil Marcus. It examines popular music and art as a social critique of Western culture.

The book covers 20th century avant-garde art movements like Dadaism, Lettrist International and Situationist International and their influence on late 20th century countercultures, The Sex Pistols and the punk movement in general. Another part of the work is the tracing of the philosophical roots of the 20th century avant-garde in the medieval "heresies" of the Cathars and the anabaptists.

A "soundtrack" to Lipstick Traces, compiling many of the songs referenced in the book, was released by Rough Trade Records in 1993.

Contents

From the back cover

Greil Marcus, from the back cover:

This book is about a single, serpentine fact: late in 1976 a record called "Anarchy in the U.K." was issued in London, and this event launched a transformation of pop music all over the world. Made by a four-man rock 'n' roll band called the Sex Pistols, and written by singer Johnny Rotten, the song distilled, in crudely poetic form, a critique of modern society once set out by a small group of Paris-based intellectuals. First organized in 1952 as the Lettrist International, and refounded in 1957 at a conference of European avant-garde artists as the Situationist International, the group gained its greatest notoriety during the French revolt of May 1968, when the premises of its critique were distilled into crudely poetic slogans and spray-painted across the walls of Paris, after which the critique was given up to history and the group disappeared. The group looked back to the surrealists of the 1920s, the dadaists who made their names during and just after the First World War, the young Karl Marx, Saint-Just, various medieval heretics, and the Knights of the Round Table.
My conviction is that such circumstances are primarily odd. For a gnomic, gnostic critique dreamed up by a handful of Left Bank cafe prophets to reappear a quarter-century later, to make the charts, and then to come to life as a whole new set of demands on culture—this is almost transcendently odd.

Table of Contents

  • Prologue
  • Version One: The Last Sex Pistols Concert
  • Version Two: A Secret History Of A Time That Passed
    • Faces
    • Legends of Freedom
    • The Art of Yesterday's Crash
    • The Crash of Yesterday's Art
    • The Assault on Notre-Dame
    • The Attack on Charlie Chaplin
    • Lipstick Traces (on a Cigarette)
    • Epilogue
    • Works Cited
    • Sources and Credits
    • Acknowledgments
    • Index

Linking in in 2023

Bascom Lamar Lunsford, Bootleg Retrospective, Deena Weinstein, Dennis Morris (photographer), Greil Marcus, I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground, Letterist International, Lettrism, Lipstick Traces (A Secret History of Manic Street Preachers), Lipstick Traces (on a Cigarette), Matthew Earnest, Notre-Dame Affair, On the Poverty of Student Life, Punk visual art, Recuperation (politics), Ripley's Believe It or Not! (1982 TV series), Roadrunner (Jonathan Richman song), Situationist International, The Plot to Blow Up the Eiffel Tower.

Partial list of illustrations

Soundtrack

A soundtrack to the book was released in 1993 on Rough Trade Records.

The Slits - A Boring LifeThe Orioles - It's Too Soon To KnowTristan Tzara, Marcel Janco, Richard Huelsenbeck - L 'Amiral cherche une maison a louerJonathan Richman - Road RunnerGuy Debord - Excerpt from soundtrack to Hurlements en faveur de SadeThe Roxy, London - AmbienceJean-Louis Brau - Instrumentation Verbale (Side 2) • The Buzzcocks - BoredomThe Adverts - One Chord WondersRaoul Hausmann - phoneme bbbbGang of Four - At Home He's A TouristThe Adverts - Gary Gilmore's EyesKleenex - U (angry side)Guy Debord - Excerpt from soundtrack to Critique de la separationThe Clash - Stage talk, Roundhouse, London, 9/23/76The Mekons - Never Been In A RiotLiliput - SplitPeter Blegvad, et all - rohrenhose-rokoko-neger-rhythmusEssential Logic - Wake UpKleenex - You (friendly side)Gil J. Wolman - Megapneumies, 3/24/63 (Side 1) • The Raincoats - In LoveGuy Debord - Excerpt from soundtrack to Hurlements en faveur de SadeMarie Osmond - KarawaneBascom Lamar Lunsford - I Wish I Was a Mole in the GroundThe Mekons - The BuildingBenny Spellman - Lipstick Traces (On a Cigarette)

See also

Main fields
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Names mentioned




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