enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. In ‘Goth: A History,’ The Cure co-founder Lol Tolhurst traces ...

    www.aol.com/news/goth-history-cure-co-founder...

    In “Goth: A History," Tolhurst says he was inspired by the writings of Joan Didion — and so he weaves in first-person accounts while exploring goth music's origins from punk's anarchy. The ...

  3. Goth subculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goth_subculture

    Gill's self-professed love of Goth culture was the topic of media interest, and it was widely reported that the word "Goth", in Gill's writings, was a reference to the alternative industrial and goth subculture rather than a reference to gothic rock music. [109]

  4. Dark culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_Culture

    Dark culture (German Schwarze Szene; Portuguese cultura obscura; Spanish escena oscura; Italian scena Dark or scena gotica), also called dark alternative scene, is a mixture of thematically related subcultures including the goth and dark wave subculture, the dark neoclassical/dark ambient scene, parts of the post-industrial scene (with the ...

  5. Gen Z have brought goth back – and in these spooky times, it ...

    www.aol.com/news/gen-z-brought-goth-back...

    ON TREND: From brand new bands to the Tim Burton revival, a fresh generation is discovering goth and making it their own. Ed Power investigates what goth looks like in the 2020s – and why it’s ...

  6. Southern Gothic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Gothic

    Southern Gothic particularly focuses on the South's history of slavery, racism, fear of the outside world, violence, a "fixation with the grotesque, and a tension between realistic and supernatural elements". [4] Similar to the elements of the Gothic castle, Southern Gothic depicts the decay of the plantation in the post-Civil War South. [4]

  7. What it means to be goth, according to a founding member of ...

    www.aol.com/founding-member-cure-lovingly...

    The reality of goth, Tolhurst said, is a fascination with “all those things that we don’t really, as a culture, like to look at straightaway — death, darkness.” “It sounds paradoxical ...

  8. History of modern Western subcultures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_modern_Western...

    Unlike the New Romantics, goth has lasted into the 21st century. In the UK, goth reached its popular peak in the late 1980s. In American urban environments, a form of street culture using freeform and semi-staccato poetry, combined with athletic break dancing, was developing as the hip hop and rap subculture.

  9. Propaganda (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_(magazine)

    Propaganda was an American gothic subculture magazine founded in 1982 by Fred H. Berger, a photographer from New York City. Berger's photography was featured prominently in the magazine. Propaganda focused on all aspects of the goth culture including fashion, sexuality, music, art and literature.