Crippled with Nerves: The Curious Case of Polio and Popular Music

Location
The Barber Institute of Fine Arts - Lecture Theatre (R14 on campus map)
Dates
Thursday 19 March 2015 (12:30-13:30)
George McKay
George McKay, 2011. Photo by Dubber.

Ian Dury, Steve Harley, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Donovan, Israel Vibration, Staff Benda Bilili: all marked by polio. How  has that childhood experience influenced their music, (how) have they sung about it, what does the disabled pop body look like on stage, have they been activists or advocates in disability rights movements, what might there be specific to polio and popular music?...

George McKay is Professor of Media Studies at the University of East Anglia and an Arts & Humanities Research Council Leadership Fellow for the Connected Communities Programme. He writes about alternative cultures, and the cultural politics of popular music, festivals and gardening. His most recent book is Shakin' All Over: Popular Music and Disability (University of Michigan Press, 2013), while forthcoming this summer is his collection The Pop Festival: History, Music, Media, Culture (Bloomsbury). 

Admission is free however places are limited so book to reserve your place.

Venue: The Barber Institute of Fine Arts - Lecture Theatre (R14 on campus map)

This event is presented as part of the University of Birmingham's Arts & Science Festival (16-22 March 2015), a week-long celebration of ideas, research and collaboration across campus.