Everything about Cultural Studies totally explained
Cultural studies is an academic discipline which combines
political economy,
communication,
sociology,
social theory,
literary theory,
media theory,
film/video studies,
cultural anthropology,
philosophy,
museum studies and
art history/
criticism to study
cultural phenomena in various societies. Cultural studies researchers often concentrate on how a particular phenomenon relates to matters of
ideology,
nationality,
ethnicity,
social class, and/or
gender.
History
The term was coined by
Richard Hoggart in 1964 when he founded the Birmingham
Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies or CCCS. It has since become strongly associated with
Stuart Hall, who succeeded Hoggart as Director.
From the 1970s onward, Stuart Hall's pioneering work, along with his colleagues
Paul Willis,
Dick Hebdige, Tony Jefferson, and
Angela McRobbie, created an international intellectual movement. Many cultural studies scholars employed Marxist methods of analysis, exploring the relationships between cultural forms (
the superstructure) and that of the political economy (
the base). By the 1970s, however, the politically formidable British working classes were in decline. Britain's manufacturing industries were fading and union rolls were shrinking. Yet, millions of working class Britons backed the rise of
Margaret Thatcher. For Stuart Hall and other Marxist theorists, this shift in loyalty from the
Labour Party to the
Conservative Party was antithetical to the interests of the working class and had to be explained in terms of cultural politics.
In order to understand the changing political circumstances of class, politics, and culture in the United Kingdom, scholars at the CCCS turned to the work of
Antonio Gramsci. Gramsci had been concerned with similar issues: why would Italian laborers and peasants vote for fascists? Why, in other words, would working people vote to give more control to corporations, and see their own rights and freedoms abrogated? Gramsci updated classical Marxism in seeing culture as a key instrument of political and social control. In this view, capitalists use not only brute force (police, prisons, repression, military) to maintain control, but also penetrate the everyday culture of working people. Thus, the key rubric for Gramsci and for cultural studies is that of
cultural hegemony.
Scott Lash writes,
Write Edgar and Sedgwick:
The theory of hegemony was of central importance to the development of British cultural studies [particularlythe CCCS]. It facilitated analysis of the ways in which subordinate groups actively resist and respond to political and economic domination. The subordinate groups need not be seen merely as the passive dupes of the dominant class and its ideology.
This line of thinking opened up fruitful work exploring
agency; a theoretical outlook which reinserted the active, critical capacities of all people. Notions of agency have supplanted much scholarly emphasis on groups of people (for example the working class, primitives, colonized peoples, women) whose
political consciousness and scope of action was generally limited to their position within certain economic and political structures. In other words, many economists, sociologists, political scientists, and historians have traditionally deprived everyday people of a role in shaping their world or outlook, although anthropologists since the 1960s have foregrounded the power of agents to contest structure, first in the work of transactionalists like
Fredrik Barth, and then in works inspired by resistance theory and post-colonial theory.
At times, cultural studies' romance with agency nearly excluded the possibility of oppression, overlooks the fact that the subaltern have their own politics, and romanticizes agency, overblowing its potentiality and pervasiveness. In work of this kind, popular in the 1990s, many cultural studies scholars discovered in consumers ways of creatively using and subverting commodities and dominant ideologies. This orientation has come under fire for a variety of reasons.
Cultural studies concerns itself with the
meaning and practices of everyday life. Cultural practices comprise the ways people do particular things (such as watching television, or eating out) in a given culture. In any given practice, people use various objects (such as
iPods or
handguns). Hence, this field studies the meanings and uses people attribute to various objects and practices. Recently, as
capitalism has spread throughout the world (a process called
globalization), cultural studies has begun to critique local and global forms of resistance to Western hegemony.
Overview
In his book
Introducing Cultural Studies,
Ziauddin Sardar lists the following five main characteristics of cultural studies:
- Cultural studies aims to examine its subject matter in terms of cultural practices and their relation to power. For example, a study of a subculture (such as white working class youth in London) would consider the social practices of the youth as they relate to the dominant classes.
- It has the objective of understanding culture in all its complex forms and of analyzing the social and political context in which culture manifests itself.
- It is both the object of study and the location of political criticism and action. For example, not only would a cultural studies scholar study an object, but she/he would connect this study to a larger, progressive political project.
- It attempts to expose and reconcile the division of knowledge, to overcome the split between tacit cultural knowledge and objective (universal) forms of knowledge.
- It has a commitment to an ethical evaluation of modern society and to a radical line of political action.
Since cultural studies is an interdisciplinary field, its practitioners draw a diverse array of theories and practices.
Approaches
Scholars in the
United Kingdom and the
United States developed somewhat different versions of cultural studies after the field's inception in the late
1970s. The British version of cultural studies was developed in the 1950s and 1960s mainly under the influence first of Richard Hoggart,
E. P. Thompson, and
Raymond Williams, and later Stuart Hall and others at the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies at the
University of Birmingham. This included overtly political,
left-wing views, and criticisms of
popular culture as 'capitalist'
mass culture; it absorbed some of the ideas of the
Frankfurt School critique of the "
culture industry" (for example mass culture). This emerges in the writings of early British cultural-studies scholars and their influences: see the work of (for example) Raymond Williams, Stuart Hall, Paul Willis, and
Paul Gilroy.
In contrast, the American version of cultural studies initially concerned itself more with understanding the subjective and appropriative side of audience reactions to, and uses of,
mass culture; for example, American cultural-studies advocates wrote about the liberatory aspects of
fandom. The distinction between American and British strands, however, has faded.
In
Canada, cultural studies has sometimes focused on issues of technology and society, continuing the emphasis in the work of
Marshall McLuhan and others. In
Australia, there has sometimes been a special emphasis on
cultural policy. In South Africa,
human rights and
Third World issues are among the topics treated. There were a number of exchanges between Birmingham and
Italy, resulting in work on Italian leftism, and theories of
postmodernism. On the other hand, there's a debate in
Latin America about the relevance of cultural studies, with some researchers calling for more action-oriented research. Cultural Studies is relatively undeveloped in
France, where there's a stronger tradition of
semiotics, as in the writings of
Roland Barthes. Also in
Germany it's undeveloped, probably due to the continued influence of the
Frankfurt School, which has developed a body of writing on such topics as mass culture, modern art and music.
Some researchers, especially in early British cultural studies, apply a
Marxist model to the field. This strain of thinking has some influence from the
Frankfurt School, but especially from the structuralist Marxism of
Louis Althusser and others. The main focus of an orthodox Marxist approach concentrates on the
production of
meaning. This model assumes a mass production of culture and identifies power as residing with those producing
cultural artifacts. In a Marxist view, those who control the
means of production (the economic
base) essentially control a culture.
Other approaches to cultural studies, such as
feminist cultural studies and later American developments of the field, distance themselves from this view. They criticize the Marxist assumption of a single, dominant meaning, shared by all, for any cultural product. The non-Marxist approaches suggest that different ways of consuming cultural artifacts affect the meaning of the product. This view is best exemplified by the book
Doing Cultural Studies: The Case of the Sony Walkman (by Paul du Gay et al), which seeks to challenge the notion that those who produce commodities control the meanings that people attribute to them. Feminist cultural analyst, theorist and art historian
Griselda Pollock contributed to cultural studies from viewpoints of
art history and
psychoanalysis. The writer
Julia Kristeva and the artist
Bracha L. Ettinger, are influential voices in the turn of the century, contributing to cultural studies from the field of art and psychoanalytical
French feminism.
Ultimately, this perspective criticizes the traditional view assuming a passive consumer, particularly by underlining the different ways people
read, receive, and interpret cultural texts. On this view, a consumer can appropriate, actively reject, or challenge the meaning of a product. These different approaches have shifted the focus away from the
production of items. Instead, they argue that
consumption plays an equally important role, since the way consumers consume a product gives meaning to an item. Some closely link the act of consuming with
cultural identity. Stuart Hall and John Fiske have become influential in these developments.
In the context of cultural studies, the idea of a
text not only includes written language, but also
films,
photographs,
fashion or
hairstyles: the texts of cultural studies comprise all the meaningful artifacts of culture. Similarly, the discipline widens the concept of "culture". "Culture" for a cultural studies researcher not only includes traditional
high culture (the culture of
ruling social groups) and
popular culture, but also everyday meanings and practices. The last two, in fact, have become the main focus of cultural studies. A further and recent approach is
comparative cultural studies, based on the discipline of
comparative literature and cultural studies.
Critical views
Cultural studies isn't a unified theory but a diverse field of study encompassing many different approaches, methods, and academic perspectives; as in any academic discipline, cultural studies academics frequently debate among themselves. However, some academics from other fields have criticised the discipline as a whole. It has been popular to dismiss cultural studies as an academic fad. Yale literature professor
Harold Bloom has been an outspoken critic of the cultural studies model of literary studies. Critics such as Bloom see cultural studies as it applies to literary scholarship as a vehicle of careerism by academics, instead promoting essentialist theories of culture, mobilising arguments that scholars should promote the public interest by studying what makes beautiful literary works beautiful.
Bloom stated his position during the 3 September 2000 episode of C-SPAN's
Booknotes:
Terry Eagleton isn't wholly opposed to cultural studies theory like Bloom, but has criticised certain aspects of it, highlighting what he sees as its strengths and weaknesses in books such as
After Theory (2003). For Eagleton, literary and
cultural theory have the potential to say important things about the "fundamental questions" in life, but theorists have rarely realized this potential.
One of the most sensationalized critiques of cultural studies came from physicist
Alan Sokal, who submitted an article to a cultural-studies journal,
Social Text. This article was what Sokal thought would be a parody of what he perceived to be the "fashionable nonsense" of
postmodernists working in cultural studies. As the paper was coming out, Sokal published an article in a self-described "academic gossip" magazine
Lingua Franca, revealing the hoax. His explanation for doing this was:
A more serious criticism comes from the sociology of
Pierre Bourdieu, who has also written on topics such as photography, art museums, and modern literature. Bourdieu's point is that cultural studies lacks scientific method. His own work makes innovative use of statistics and in-depth interviews. Cultural studies is relatively unstructured as an academic field. It is difficult to hold researchers accountable for their claims because there's no agreement on method and validity.
Conversely, cultural studies scholars have criticized more traditional academic disciplines such as
literary criticism,
science,
economics,
sociology,
anthropology, and
art history.
Cultural Studies in the 21st Century
Though a young discipline, cultural studies has established a firm footing in many universities around the globe. With steadily rising enrollments, expanding numbers of departments, and a robust publishing field, cultural studies steps into the 21st century as a young yet successful discipline. The "discipline," if it can be called that (and there's considerable debate among scholars to this effect) is filled with discussions about its future directions, methods, and purposes.
Sociologist Scott Lash has recently put forth the idea that cultural studies is entering a new phase. Arguing that the political and economic milieu has fundamentally altered from that of the 1970s, he writes, "I want to suggest that power now... is largely
post-hegemonic... Hegemony was the concept that de facto crystallized cultural studies as a discipline. Hegemony means domination through consent as much as coercion. It has meant domination through ideology or discourse..." He writes that the flow of power is becoming more internalized, that there has been "a shift in power from the hegemonic mode of
'power over' to an intensive notion of
power from within (including domination from within) and power as a generative force." Resistance to power, in other words, becomes complicated when power and domination are increasingly (re)produced within oneself, within subaltern groups, within exploited people.
In response, however, Richard Johnson argues that Lash appears to have misunderstood the most basic concept of the discipline . 'Hegemony', even in the writings of Antonio Gramsci, isn't understood as a mode of domination at all, but as a form of political leadership which involves a complex set of relationships between various groups and individuals and which always proceeds from the immanence of power to all social relations. This complex understanding has been taken much further in the work of Stuart Hall and that of political theorist
Ernesto Laclau, who has had some influence on Cultural Studies. It is therefore unclear as to why Lash claims that Cultural Studies has understood hegemony as a form of domination, or where the originality of his theory of power is actually thought to lie.
This illustrates the extent to which Cultural Studies remains a highly contested field of intellectual debate and self-revision.
Institutionally, the discipline has undergone major shifts. The Birmingham
Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies closed in 2002, marking the end - arguably - of the particular conception of cultural studies - focussed almost exclusively on the study of contemporary, popular culture - that it promoted. Meanwhile, the
London Consortium - formed in 1993 - was propagating a very different conception of the discipline, one that was tied neither to the contemporary, nor to the popular. As a postgraduate course run as a collaboration between
Tate the
ICA,
Birkbeck, University of London, the
Architectural Association and the
Science Museum, the Consortium also places a primary importance on the cultural institutions that are involved in the production, dissemination and consumption of culture. Similar approaches are observable at the
Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis: such postgraduate institutions will determine to a large extent the future of the discipline, if it has one.
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