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Music, Hope and Transformation through Higher Education
A Psychogeographic Personal Narrative
Music, Hope and Transformation through Higher Education
A Psychogeographic Personal Narrative
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Description
This is a creative work of psychogeography, theory and autoethnography, which offers a unique insight into the personal world of music-meaning-making, working-class heritage, and the transformation of identity through a life-long obsession with aeroplanes and flight. Combined, these aspects articulate a progressive journey of transformation through informal learning and higher education, exploring personal progression through the narrative techniques of life-writing and innovative theory work.
The book provides readers with a sequence of intimate and informative provocations through memory and imagination. Shaped around the experience of a car journey (as part of a commute to work), the book invites readers to explore a chaos of memories – provoked by a range of songs encountered as part of a playlist, which emerge as part of a compelling analysis of music, the symbolism of flight, and educative hope.
Through a combination of storytelling and scholarly analysis, the book utilises cultural theory, process philosophy, and biography and invites readers to adapt and incorporate the concepts and psychogeographic techniques for creative student engagements as part of curricular and assessment practices.
Table of Contents
Part I: Music, Psychogeography & Hope: Some Theoretical Permutations
1. Introduction – A Psychogeography for Pedagogic Escape
2. Music, Memory & Haecceity
3. Motorway, Music & Space
Part II: Sonoric Haecceities of Heritage & Entrenchment
4. Childhood: Flight & Imagination
5. Masculinity Autopsy
6. Birds & Longing
7. Souvenir from the Infirmary
8. Storm Damage
9. Unpicking a Revelation
Part III: Sonoric Haecceities of Hope & Redemption
10. Cinematic Reverberation
11. Soteria
12. 35,000 Feet in the Sky
13. Archaeology for a Dinosaur
14. Champion of the World
Part IV: Curricular Expeditions Beyond Pedagogy
15. Born to Run
16. Tellin' Stories
Afterword, David Hayes (University Centre Blackpool and the Fylde College, UK)
Appendix: Undergraduate Essay 'Acquainted with the Night'
Bibliography
Product details
| Published | 03 Sep 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 238 |
| ISBN | 9781350514287 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
| Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Blending scholarship and personal narrative with theory embedded in practice, Craig Hammond provides a forthright account of his educational journey from working-class, school-room failure to successful professional university educator. With his extensive knowledge of psychology, sociology, literary theory, cultural criticism, music, and and informed pedagogy, Hammond makes an impassioned call to embrace psychogeography and autoethnography as pedagogic strategies for authentic, meaningful, life-long learning.
Robert DiYanni, Center for the Advancement of Teaching, New York University, USA
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This deeply moving book traces a personal journey of escape from precarious working-class conditions and the difficult process of becoming someone else. Through autoethnographic reflection and theory-informed utopian imagination, it reveals the transformative power of higher education to foster disruption, liberation, and hope for a different and better future.
Hannes Hautz, Assistant Professor at the University of Innsbruck, Austria
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This is an immensely courageous and creative book, weaving together autoethnography, social theory and academic experimentation. Hammond takes the reader on a timely, important and ultimately hopeful journey, where motorways, music and writing become inspirations for the potential transformation of universities into spaces for self-determined and liberatory learning.
Anke Schwittay, University of Sussex, UK
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A moving, profound manuscript on higher education that combines theory, memoir, and music. In these critical times when the arts and humanities are under attack, Craig Hammond's book reminds us why the university matters, and offers transformative possibilities. Beautifully written, offering intimate glimpses into the making of an educator and a scholar. Such a pleasurable and thought-provoking read.
Yoke-Sum Wong, Professor of Critical and Creative Studies, Alberta University of the Arts, Canada
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Craig Hammond's autoethnography richly mixes movements and music. Cutting across disciplines and combining social critique, memoir and psychogeography, the narrative is inspiring and often touching.
James D Sidaway, National University of Singapore, Singapore
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Lyrical and luminous, Music, Hope and Transformation Through Higher Education is a joyful, immersive read. Its accounts of, and reflections upon, the author's various journeyings are at once unflinching and poetic. I find myself transported, the book's stories and songs reverberating long after reading.
Jonathan Wyatt, Centre for Creative-Relational Inquiry, The University of Edinburgh, UK

























