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The Last Mixtape

Physical Media and Nostalgic Cycles

The Last Mixtape

Physical Media and Nostalgic Cycles

A reflection on the evolution of physical media into metaphor, through the history of music curation.
 
Obsolescence makes the heart grow fonder, at least in the case of the mixtape. Not all technologies are so lucky. Some (say, wax cylinders) fade almost completely from cultural memory. A lucky few pass into metaphor: we still “hang up” our smartphones, “cut” film, and “patch” computer code. As digital streaming completes the obsolescence of physical media, what will become of the humble cassette?

In The Last Mixtape, Seth Long offers a microhistory of music curation, anchored by the cassette, from which he explores the meanings of obsolescence, ownership, nostalgia, and the speed of cultural change. A moving meditation on our relationship with music, memory, and curation in the digital century, Long ultimately calls for a return to the media ecology represented by the mixtape: a world in which media is cheap and abundant but tactile and meaningfully engaged.

224 pages | 7 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Digital Studies

History: History of Technology

Media Studies

Rhetoric and Communication

Reviews

"Comprehensive and meticulous, this will fascinate media scholars and audiophiles."

Publishers Weekly

“Is there a more talismanic piece of Jurassic technology, a greater Gen X madeleine, than the cassette? Long can tell you why that might be. The Last Mixtape is a vibrantly smart media history of ownership, in-built obsolesce, and nostalgia—but it’s also a rousing defense of the singular intimacies, with music and with one another, afforded by obdurately physical media, in all their creaking, buzzing, analog glory.”

Peter Coviello, University of Illinois Chicago

“In this brilliant, thought-provoking book, Long uses the mixtape–as an object, as an art form, as a concept–to launch into a wide-ranging meditation on the way we relate to music, media, memory, and so much more. Deftly analyzing how shifts in technology and culture have changed us, Long stands up for physical media, championing how the mixtape 'showed the world what it looked like for culture to co-opt capitalism for a change rather than the other way around.'”

Marc Masters, author of 'High Bias: The Distorted History of the Cassette Tape'

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The First Mixtapes: A Top 10 Countdown
2. Hot Wax Pirates
3. The Cassette Mixtape (Side A: Romantic Stuff)
4. The Cassette Mixtape (Side B: Industrial Noise)
5. A Rhetoric and Poetics of the Mixtape
6. Music without a Medium
7. The Infinite Playlist

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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