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Description

This collection of scholarly essays analyzes how NOFX's aesthetics of punk provocation and discomfort provokes the band's listeners to confront contradictions and conflicts in society concerning politics, identity, authenticity, and decorum.

This collection of scholarly essays analyzes how NOFX's aesthetics of punk provocation and discomfort push the band's listeners to confront contradictions and conflicts in society concerning politics, identity, authenticity, and decorum. For forty years, NOFX's brand of witty, offensive, humorous, juvenile, intelligent, existential, political, politically incorrect, and/or philosophically probing punk has reared several generations in punk attitude and ethos, for better or worse. The band pioneered melodic yet hardcore So-Cal punk style, rode the wave of mainstream punk popularity in the 1990s, protested the Bush administration in the 2000s, and continued their punk provocations up through their retirement in 2024. This book explores how NOFX pursued punk's proclivity for provocation to critique both mainstream society and the punk scene itself, how their music challenges notions of punk as simplistic, stripped-down rock requiring little musical skill, and other topics with thirteen essays from scholars in a variety of fields.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors
Introduction: So Long, and Thanks for All the Provocations
by Ellen Bernhard (Georgian Court University, USA), Stefano Morello (The Graduate Center, CUNY, USA), and David Pearson (Lehman College, USA)

Part 1: Punk Humor and Satire
1. They've Actually Gotten Smarter: NOFX, Rhetorical Snottiness, and Punk Continuities
by David Ensminger (Lee College, USA)
2. Music Speaks Louder than Words (Or Maybe About the Same): Humor and Meaning Through NOFX's Subversion of Expectations
by Jose M. Garza, Jr. (Texas State University, USA)
3. Beer and Joking in Las Vegas: Punk Humor and Punk Hypocrisy
by Paul Fields (Buckinghamshire New University, UK)


Part 2: Politics and Futurities
4. From No Future to Nope, Future: NOFX's Contradictory Approaches to Punk Rock in Perpetuity
by Ellen Bernhard (Georgian Court University, USA)
5. Leave it to Fat Mike: PunkVoter as Infrastructure of Dissent
by Stefano Morello (The Graduate Center, CUNY, USA)
6. The Error State: Becoming Radical While Punk Gets Liberal
by Joseph Boisvere (The Graduate Center, CUNY, USA)

Part 3: Identity and Representation
7. It's Complicated: NOFX, White Masculinity, and the Ambivalences of Punk
by Justus Grebe (Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany)
8. Don't Call me “Bro” and Don't Call Me Cis: Fat Mike's Queer(ed) Punk Performativity
by John Ike Sewell (University of West Georgi, USA)
9. Radically Queer Community in Home Street Home
by Michael Simmons (College of the Canyons, USA)


Part 4: Being and Sounding Punk
10. “Kicking in Heads at the Punk Rock Show”: How NOFX Performs Punk Authenticity
by Robbie Segars (University of North Texas, USA)
11. Because I'm Punk! How NOFX Navigated its Social Evaluations and those of Punk Rock
by Lorenz Graf-Vlachy (TU Dortmund University, Germany) and Timothy Pollock (University of Tennessee, USA)
12. Sybaritic Sounds, NOFX, and the Harmonic-Timbral Line
by Lance D. Morrison (Boston University, USA)
13. The Sounds of Soul Doubt in the Music of NOFX and the Aesthetics of Gen X Romanticism
by David Pearson (Lehman College, USA)
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Jun 12 2025
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 1st
Extent 248
ISBN 9798765128633
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

David Pearson

David Pearson is Adjunct Associate Professor at Le…

Anthology Editor

Stefano Morello

Stefano Morello is Assistant Director for Digital…

Anthology Editor

Ellen Bernhard

Ellen Bernhard is Assistant Professor of Digital C…

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