Punk e a juventude

Cláudia Moreira
“Punk promised to build a scene which could not be taken. Its anger, pleasures, and ugliness were to go beyond what capitalism and bourgeois society could swallow. It would be untouchable, undesirable, unmanageable. Early punk was a proclamation and an embrace of discord.”
Ari Hirvonen (2011), “Punk, Law, Resistance... No Future: Punk against the Boredom of the Law”

“Early punk sought to tear apart consumer goods, royalty, and sociability; and it sought to destroy the idols of the bourgeoisie. Punk’s attitude and style, its desire to be present and fully engaged in every moment and its immediate furious and filthy “No” to the boredom of the totalitarianism of mediocrity has survived.”
Ari Hirvonen (2011), “Punk, Law, Resistance... No Future: Punk against the Boredom of the Law”

“We were thinking revolution along with music.” For her [Ari Up], boredom and poverty makes the mixture of revolution. Punk is, thus, the transgressive politics of boredom.”
Ari Hirvonen (2011), “Punk, Law, Resistance... No Future: Punk against the Boredom of the Law”