| Publication Type | thesis |
| School or College | School of Music |
| Department | Music |
| Title | Functions of popular music in the lives of adolescents |
| Date | 2010-02-10 |
| Description | This study determines that a specified group of adolescents' favorite songs fulfill Frith's functions of popular music; (a) to create a type of self-definition; (b) to provide a way of managing the relationship between one's private and public emotional lives; (c) to shape popular memory, organize one's sense of time, and intensify a given experience; and (d) to provide a sense of musical ownership, according to those same adolescents' own writings and a survey on that topic. Sophomores from a high school in the Salt Lake Valley were given an assignment that included a one-page essay describing what functions their favorite song performs in their life, and a survey based on Frith's "Functions of Popular Music." The data collected from that assignment were analyzed using a deductive approach described by Mark Abrahamson to determine whether the functions that the students ascribed to their songs matched Frith's functions. |
| Type | Text |
| Publisher | University of Utah |
| Subject | Music and youth; Group identity |
| Language | eng |
| Rights Management | ©Isaac Lamont Bickmore. To comply with copyright, the file for this work may be restricted to The University of Utah campus libraries pending author permission. |
| Format Medium | application/pdf |
| Format Extent | 57,126 bytes |
| Identifier | us-etd2,154409 |
| Permissions Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/details?id=1248892 |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6qn6ncn |
| Setname | ir_som |
| ID | 193038 |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6qn6ncn |