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词条 King Mob
释义

  1. Actions

  2. Graffiti

  3. References in popular culture

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. Sources

{{Other uses|King Mob (disambiguation)}}{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2015}}{{Use British English|date=July 2015}}King Mob was an English radical group based in London during the late 1960s/early 1970s.[1]

It was a cultural mutation of the Situationists and the anarchist group UAW/MF. It sought to emphasise the cultural anarchy and disorder being ignored in Britain, with the ultimate aim of promoting proletarian revolution. It derived its name from Christopher Hibbert's 1958 book on the Gordon Riots of June 1780, in which rioters daubed the slogan "His Majesty King Mob" on the walls of Newgate Prison, after gutting the building.

Actions

King Mob appreciated pop culture and distributed its ideas and political ideas through various posters and through its publication King Mob Echo, which provoked reaction by celebrating killers like Jack the Ripper, Mary Bell and John Christie. One flyer in particular celebrated Valerie Solanas' 1968 shooting of Andy Warhol and included a hit-list of Yoko Ono, Mick Jagger, Bob Dylan, Richard Hamilton, Mario Amaya (who was also shot by Solanas), David Hockney, Mary Quant, Twiggy, Marianne Faithfull and the IT editor Barry Miles.

The King Mob group allegedly planned a series of audacious actions, including blowing up a waterfall in the Lake District, painting the poet Wordsworth's house with the words "Coleridge Lives", and hanging peacocks in Holland Park, London.[2] However, none of the aforementioned plans were executed. An action that was carried out, inspired by the New York-based Black Mask's "mill-in at Macy's", involved King Mob appearing at the Selfridges store in London, with one member, dressed as Father Christmas, attempting to distribute all of the store's toys to children. Police subsequently forced the children to return the toys. This action involved Malcolm McLaren who reputedly applied the group's situationist ideas in the promotion of the Sex Pistols.[3]

King Mob was also responsible for attacks on art galleries and for organising a battle between local skinheads (whom they considered to be "the working class avant-garde") and greasers in central London.{{citation needed|date=January 2015}}

Graffiti

Graffiti attributed to King Mob was observed in many places particularly in the Notting Hill area, including, "I don't believe in nothing - I feel like they ought to burn down the world - just let it burn down baby."

The most celebrated graffiti attributed to King Mob was the slogan which was painted along a half-mile section of the wall beside the tube (railway) commuter route into London between Ladbroke Grove and Westbourne Park tube stations in west London:

"Same thing day after day- tube - work - dinner - work - tube - armchair - TV - sleep - tube - work - how much more can you take? - one in ten go mad, one in five cracks up."[4]

References in popular culture

The "Mask of King Mob" can be seen in the background of the comic book Watchmen, written by Alan Moore. It is in what appears to be a trophy room of the Minutemen, noticeable during the infamous scene where The Comedian tries to rape the original Silk Specter.

A protagonist in the comic book series The Invisibles (authored by Grant Morrison) is codenamed "King Mob". The Invisibles is organized anti-hierarchically, and is dedicated to defeating a global conspiracy which deceives and preys upon the world's population. The character "King Mob" describes himself as an anarchist.

Graffiti referencing King Mob appears in season 2 episode 7 of Stranger Things.

King Mob was the name of a punk band of which writer and Neoist anti-artist Stewart Home was once a member.

See also

  • Anti-art
  • The Angry Brigade

References

1. ^http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/articles/mob-who-shouldnt-really-be-here
2. ^{{Cite journal|last=Cooper|first=Sam|date=2013-03-01|title=The Peculiar Romanticism of the English Situationists|url=http://camqtly.oxfordjournals.org/content/42/1/20|journal=The Cambridge Quarterly|language=en|volume=42|issue=1|pages=20–37|doi=10.1093/camqtly/bft010|issn=0008-199X}}
3. ^http://www.stewarthomesociety.org/ass/punk.htm
4. ^http://www.revoltagainstplenty.com/index.php/archive-local/128-a-hidden-history-of-king-mob-posterscartoons.html

Sources

  • "The End of Music", a pamphlet written by David and Stuart Wise in the mid- to late-1970s and published in Glasgow. The text was later reprinted by AK Press in the 1990s as part of Stewart Home's book What is Situationism? A Reader.
  • King Mob. Nosotros, el Partido del Diablo, Spanish compilation of King Mob texts, edited by La Felguera Ediciones in 2007
  • The Situationist International in Britain: Modernism, Surrealism, and the Avant-Gardes (Routledge 2016)
{{UK far left}}

4 : Anti-consumerist groups|British artist groups and collectives|Underground culture|Situationist International

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