List of Figures; Acknowledgements; 1. The Precarity of Memory, Heritage and History in Remembering Popular Music's Past, Lauren Istvandity and Zelmarie Cantillon; MEMORY; 2. Consuming Popular Music Heritage, Paul Long; 3. 'Back in the Day': Experiencing and Retelling the Past as a Claim to Belong in the Current Northern Soul Scene, Sarah Raine; 4. Resilience and Change: Popular Folk Songs in a Cultural Landscape, Ashton Sinamai and John Schofield; 5. Remembering the Independent Record Shop: The Ordinary Affects of Leedin Records, Adele Pavlidis; 6. 'Mean Streets' as Heritage Object: Music, Nostalgia and the Museumification of Martin Scorsese, Amanda Howell; HERITAGE; 7. Mark II: Re-working the Heritage B(r)and, Shane Homan; 8. The Continually Precarious State of the Musical Object, Charles Fairchild; 9. Showing Off: Taking Popular Music Research into the Museum, Peter Doyle; 10. Preserving Icelandic Popular Music Heritage: Issues of Collection, Access and Representation, Zelmarie Cantillon, Bob Buttigieg and Sarah Baker; 11. Questioning the Future of Popular Music Heritage in the Age of Platform Capitalism, Raphaël Nowak; HISTORY; 12. Jim Jarmusch's 'Mystery Train' (1989): Representing the Memphis Music Legacy on Film, Adriano Tedde and David Baker; 13. Phenomenology of the Surf Ballroom's Winter Dance Party: Affect and Community at a Popular Music Heritage Tourism Event, Sheryl Davis, Sherry Davis and Zelmarie Cantillon; 14. Disappearing History: Two Case Studies on the Precarity of Music Writing, Ian Rogers; 15. Great Albums, Greedy Collectors and Gritty Sounds? A View from 'Snobbish Connoisseurs' on the Canonization and Archivalism of Korean Pop-Rock, Hyunjoon Shin and Keewoong Lee; 16. Towards a Feminist History of Popular Music: Re-examining Writing on Musicians and Domestic Violence in the Wake of #metoo, Catherine Strong; List of Contributors; Index.