Deena WeinsteinDeena Weinstein (born March 15, 1943) is a professor of sociology at DePaul University whose research focuses on popular culture. She is particularly well known for her research on heavy metal culture, on which subject she wrote a book, Heavy Metal: A Cultural Sociology (1991),[1] later published in a revised and updated version as Heavy Metal: The Music and Its Culture (2009).[2] CareerWeinstein holds a PhD from Purdue University.[3] Her 1991 book Heavy Metal: A Cultural Sociology "describes the heavy metal music culture, explains why it has prompted demands for censorship, and argues that the music deserves tolerance and respect."[1] She argues that heavy metal has outlasted many other rock genres largely due to the emergence of an intense, exclusionary, strongly masculine subculture.[4] A review of the book calls it:
The Chicago Sun-Times called the book the definitive study of heavy metal culture, saying that it "does for metal what Greil Marcus's Lipstick Traces did for the Sex Pistols."[6] Weinstein was interviewed in the 2005 documentary Metal: A Headbanger's Journey and the later Metal Evolution. References
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