'Rock'n'roll was everywhere'

Youth culture history as heritage tourism on Queensland's Gold Coast

Authors

  • Christine Feldman-Barrett Griffith University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2015.26

Keywords:

Gold Coast, music-driven youth culture, heritage tourism

Abstract

Historically, the Gold Coast is a ‘young’ city and urban area inextricably tied to tourism, and a reputation for sun and surf. While this is undeniably true, another lesser known narrative bound to music-driven youth culture from the 1960s to the 1980s is also part of the Gold Coast’s history. With ‘heritage tourism’ linked to popular music in recent years, this article examines how the Gold Coast’s youth culture history may potentially inform new tourist practices in the country’s sixth largest city. Regardless of whether such heritage tourism is ever adopted by the Gold Coast’s governing bodies, mapping this relationship between music, youth and place offers a new perspective on an active Australian city — one often stereotyped as a place with a penchant for erasing its past and only looking to the future.

Author Biography

  • Christine Feldman-Barrett, Griffith University

    Christine Feldman-Barrett is a Lecturer in Sociology at Griffith University. Her scholarship focuses on the histories of youth culture and popular music, both locally and internationally. Her first book ‘We are the Mods’: A transnational history of a youth subculture (Peter Lang, 2009), examined Mod culture in Britain, Germany, the United States and Japan from the 1960s to the early 2000s. She is also the editor of and a contributing author to Lost Histories of Youth Culture (Peter Lang 2015).

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Published

2015-12-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Feldman-Barrett, C. (2015). ’Rock’n’roll was everywhere’: Youth culture history as heritage tourism on Queensland’s Gold Coast. Queensland Review, 22(2), 131-142. https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2015.26