What is Cultural Studies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

What is Cultural Studies

Description:

Emphasized reciprocity in cultural texts - blurring lines between producer and consumer. ... resisting dominant system hair, clothes read as signs of resistance) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:67
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: facultyWa9
Category:
Tags: cultural | studies

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: What is Cultural Studies


1
What is Cultural Studies?
  • What is Culture?

2
Definitions of Culture
  • Raymond Williams (a founder of cultural studies)
    culture includes the organization of
    production, the structure of the family, the
    structure of institutions which express or govern
    social relationships, the characteristic forms
    through which members of the society communicate
  • Clifford Geertz (Anthropologist) culture is
    simply the ensemble of stories we tell ourselves
    about ourselves
  • Margaret Mead (Anthropologist) culture is the
    learned behavior of a society or a subgroup

3
  • Multiple Methods (textual analysis, ethnography,
    psychoanalysis)
  • Multiple Modes of Inquiry (Marxism,
    post-structuralism, post-colonialism, feminism)

4
  • Power is central in cultural studies. Cultural
    Studies aims to examine subject matter in terms
    of cultural practices and representations and
    their relationships to power.

5
By Definition, Cultural Studies Is
  • Radical
  • Committed to social reconstruction by political
    involvement
  • Not apolitical, distanced form of scholarship
  • To change structures of dominance.

6
Name
  • The name cultural studies comes from the Centre
    for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS)
  • In existence from 1963 to 2002 at the University
    of Birmingham in the UK

7
Founding of Cultural Studies
  • Became known as the Birmingham School or just
    British Cultural Studies. Emphasized reciprocity
    in cultural texts - blurring lines between
    producer and consumer.
  • Academics from largely working-class backgrounds.
    Concerned with question of culture in
    class-based England. Celebrated authentic
    popular culture of new industrial working class.
    Focus on how culture is practiced and how culture
    is made. How cultural practice leads to struggle
    for cultural domination.

8
Influenced by Frankfurt School
  • Dissident Marxists in Germany who wanted to
    clarify social conditions Marx never saw
    believed in Marxs historical materialism and
    include Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, Herbert
    Marcuse, Walter Benjamin and later Jurgen
    Habermas.
  • Frankfurt school famous for fleeing Germany for
    Southern California and having snooty attitude
    towards popular culture as opiate of people

9
Influenced by New Left
  • Precursor to CS.
  • British response to Russian invasion of Hungary
    in 1956 many who denounced Stalinist variety of
    Marxism formed New Left. Students and
    intellectuals from former UK colonies moved on
    fringes and never allowed to be part of dominant
    institutions of UK left they were New Left.
    Without colonial intellectuals there would be no
    British New Left and no cultural studies. So
    from beginning UK cultural studies had
    international foundation

10
Founders
  • Richard Hoggarth (The Uses of Literacy, 1957, is
    considered by some to be the first text in
    cultural studies. Based work on F. R. Leaviss
    ideas on lit crit, argued that critical reading
    of art could reveal the felt quality of life of
    a society. Art creates life in full complexity)
  • Raymond Williams, Culture and Society (1958) and
    The Long Revolution (1961) draw on two
    traditions within Marxism practice of seeing
    culture as specific expressions of coherence of
    organic communities and resisting determinism in
    its various forms. Culture all-inclusive
    identity, a whole way of life, material,
    intellectual, and spiritual. Williams goes
    beyond literary and philosophical analysis to
    examine language in all the forms in which it has
    been used to give meaning to lived experience.
    No thing as masses. Good as well as bad mass
    culture.

11
Founder
  • E.P. Thompson - radical historian changed
    perception of British history The Making of the
    English Working Class (1978). Differs from
    theoretical Marxists and sociologists class is
    historical phenomenon that cant be understood as
    structure or category. Class not thing
    something that happens in human relationships.
  • CS developments from Thompson popular mass
    culture not new creation of consumer society
    has history. Meaningful change over a
    considerable historical period.
  • History is a form within which we fight, and
    many have fought before us. For the past is not
    just dead, inert, confining it carries signs and
    evidences also of creative resources which can
    sustain the present and prefigure possibility.
    Thompson argued against Althusseurs introduction
    of structuralism into Marxism.

12
Founder
  • Stuart Hall sociologist most canonized of
    founding fathers of cultural studies. In 50s
    leader in New Left, in 60s and 70s, at CCCS, in
    80s at Open University and led New Times debate
    at Marxism Today
  • Activism and theory. Cultural studies political
    and theoretical questions. Throughout career has
    described himself remaining within shouting
    distance of Marx BUT in late 50s and early 60s
    rejected Marx to engage with contemporary. This
    changed in 70s - Centre focus on structural
    Marxism. In early 80s writing about Marxism
    without Guarantees. In late 80s and early 90s
    Marxist element abandoned. Never accepted that
    class struggle explains and determines
    everything.
  • Hall about cultural studies having a practical
    impact on reality

13
On CS agenda
  • 70s UK cultural studies all about style and
    behavior of young working class men (punks,
    rockers, mods as symbolically resisting dominant
    system hair, clothes read as signs of
    resistance)
  • 80s Broadened CS to include women and Blacks
    but again on reading signs of resistance and
    opposition to dominant culture
  • UK CS 90s diversity and originality of subjects
    studied and a political dimension

14
Influence Athusser
  • French philosopher Louis Althusser (1918-1990)
    imported structuralism into Marxism to make it
    more of a science.
  • 3 key ideas of Althusser in CS
  • 1., main ideological instruments of society (law,
    religion, education, family) are just as
    important as economic conditions.
  • 2., Culture is neither totally dependent or
    totally independent of economic conditions and
    relationships,
  • 3., Ideology does not construct false
    consciousness ideology provides conceptual
    framework through which we interpret and make
    sense of our lived, material conditions and Hall
    says that ideology therefore produces our culture
    as well as our consciousness of who and what we
    are

15
Influence Gramsci
  • Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) political activist,
    Marxist philosopher and founder of Italian
    Communist Party. Believed that Lenins Bolshevik
    rev in Russia (1917) could be transplanted to
    Italy. But then in 1922 Benito Mussolini,
    fascist, became dictator of Italy. Even though
    Gramsci was an elected member of parliament who
    should have had immunity as such, he was arrested
    by Fascists in 1926 and spent rest of his life in
    prison. Has an enforced leisure to reflect on
    socialist defeat and role of culture in society.
  • Key term hegemony binds society together
    without use of force negotiation and consent.
    Ideas, values, believes not imposed from above,
    and dont develop in free and accidental way but
    are negotiated through series of encounters
    between classes.
  • Culture is a key site where struggle for hegemony
    takes place. In popular culture issues of moral
    and intellectual leadership resolved.
  • All men are intellectuals even though all men in
    society do not have the function of
    intellectuals. Organic intellectuals openly
    identified with oppressed class, shared interests
    and worked on behalf.
  • In CS hegemony theory doesnt work as Gramsci
    originally formulated it expanded beyond
    boundaries of class to include race, gender,
    culture, consumerism, meaning, pleasure.

16
Critiques of British CS
  • For parochialism, Anglocentrism, overemphasis on
    class above race and gender, and with romantic
    treatment of urban style and subculture.
  • For being Marxism in disguise (esp Marxist
    materialist notion of history).

17
Some ways Marxism influenced CS
  • Assumption that industrial capitalist society
    unequally divided along class, gender, and ethnic
    lines. But CS goes even further in culture
    division established and fought for, subordinate
    and marginalized groups resist imposition of
    meanings which reflect interests of dominant
    groups.
  • CS analyze social structures in terms of how
    cultural forces have given historic form.
    Culture important because shapes history social
    structures. SO CS doesnt treat history and
    culture as separate entities.
  • But CS has tended to oppose reductionist Marxism
    (hard determinism of history and economics)

18
Migration of UK CS
  • During Thatcher years (1979-90) UK CS began to
    fragment and migrate to US, Canada, Australia,
    France, and India. With each country acquired
    own special characteristics some less political
    and more on aesthetic and textual analysis. Some
    more with marginalized.
  • In US CS began in mid-80s. At this time in US
    humanities in turmoil. Many disciplines moving
    towards a more active engagement with politics of
    social identity and examination of representation
    of cultural forms. In media studies, emphasis
    shifting towards ethnography of audiences.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com