Comprehensive de-mythologising of the scene and its orbiting satellites, esp. in relation to its fundamental flaws and collapse (transgression as a political act, leading to notoriety, leading to inflated self-importance/fame-hunger leading to meaningless provocation/contrarianism in the name of attention-seeking - see nick zedd, a brutish contrarian asshole who made some great films but also in later life took a hard right-wing/libertarian turn and referred to RFK Jr and Joe Rogan as some of the great transgressors of the modern age - Casandra Stark Mele's interview towards the end of the book was revelatory, the highlight of the book and a drastic, beautiful demolition of the high-falutin arrogance and self-ascribed importance of some of these filmmakers - there is a politik to transgression, and there were filmmakers who used this for sincere pleas and inflamed rebellion, but the death of the movement came from the cheapening of meaning in favour of G.G. Allin horror-show provocation (I love both filmmakers, but to compare Beth B and Charles Pinion demonstrates this clearly, the Cinema of Transgression shifting from a rebellion and a cry of anguish to another arm of underground horror shock-jock (again, a style i still love dearly, but markedly a different form of expression bearing no resemblance to the original wave or even Zedd's 1985 manifesto)). Fascinating read, especially for the reasons Sargeant might not have even considered.