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The Culturas Studies Reader (Simon Deuring, 1994)

THE CULTURAS STUDIES READER. Simon Deuring (ed) London Routlegde, 1994

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INTRODUCTION – Simon During 
Cultural Studies is the study of contemporary culture, which can be analyzed in many ways: sociologically, for instance, describing institutions, systems, or critically, celebrating literature or literary images/texts.
Two features describe early cultural studies: 1) Subjectivity as inaugurated by R. Hoggart’s book The Uses of Literacy (1957) foregrounding one’s life-practice as a constituent of a larger network of life-practices. 2) Engaged form of analysis, focusing on political questions and arguing that culture/society are indissociably entwined. Social inequality stems at individual level.

A Brief History of Cultural Studies
It stems out of Leavisism (F.R. Leavis) trying to disseminate ‘cultural capital’ (Bourdieu’s expression) in the educational system. However, it focused only in a restricted canon, disregarding modern works. This ‘great tradition’ put forth by Leavisism was directed to high art and disregarded the sense of pleasure offered by mass culture.
The works of Hoggart and Williams develop Leavisism into Cultural Studies. Although they accepted culture should be measured in terms of its capacities to deepen and widen our experiences, they thought Leavinism was detached from the communal experience forms of life.
Britain’s employment was on the rise and the social gap was getting shorter. The working class communal life was fragmenting.
Cultural Studies then developed in two ways. 1) Old notion of culture (pub life, dancing, singing, etc.) was giving way to culture organized from afar (educational system, government and culture industry). This meant that less people identified themselves with workers, culture was becoming a set apart from politics, and the proletarian identity was fading.
In this context, Cultural Studies theorists began to explore culture’s political function, from the early 70s culture was analyzed through the concept of hegemony (Gramsei). Trying to explain why was Fascism so popular if it toiled liberty, he came up with the idea that hegemonic forces are in constant adaptation, so the counter-hegemonic strategies should be constantly revised. Foucault calls it governmentality, a mean of producing docile citizens through the educational system.
Culture was seen less as an expression of communal lives and more as an apparatus of a larger system of domination. Cultural Studies offered a critique of culture’s hegemonic effects. Largely represented by Stuart Hall’s and James Clifford’s semiotic analysis, culture was seen as broken down into messages/practices/discourses which were distributed by media. Ex.: Cigarette as a rite of passage/masculinity/freedom and transcendence of workday life. Semiotics remained as an analysis of ‘coding’ or ‘recordings’, not uses (life practices) or feeling, although Hall proposes the concept of ‘decoding’ in his essay.
70s Cultural Studies was divided into ‘culturalists’ (forms of life) and structuralists (semiotics). L. Althusser, backed up by Lacan’s psychoanalytic notions, came up with a harder form of structuralism. Individuals as constructs of ideology (set of images/discourses that stand for widespread values – commonsense). Using ideology the state and capitalism avoid revolution. For Althusser dominant ideology turns the political, partial into universal, natural and eternal. False idea of freedom, autonomy hides the real picture because ideology helps to make sense of the world. Promise to a full’I-ness’ which can only exist where ‘I am not’.
Politico Psychoanalytical Structuralism never made much headway in Cultural Studies as it did in Film Studies. It did not give much space for the individual to act on the world in its own terms. It offered truths, which took little account of the differences, did not concentrate on individual politics. Semiotic thought would enter culturalism with the concept of polysemy (a signifier with more than one meaning). Ex.: Malboro Man = toughness = cancer.
Polysemy finds its limits in the individual signs/units. Yet through the concept of polysemy we can reach ‘hybridization’ and ‘negotiation’ of meaning. Malboro Man can be transferred to a tacky cd cover, furnish a poor bar in Lagos as symbol of Western Liberty and affluence, decorate a flat in Manhattan in a postmodern touch (basically displacement).
The French model breaks down the earlier form of Cultural Studies by stating it less centered around a ‘dominant’ set of institutions or ideology. The reason for this is the ascension of the new right, Regan (1981) and Thatcher (1979). The student body changed and Cultural Studies change focus for more fragmented models. Cultural Studies became genuinely global after embracing themes of ethnic, sexual preferences, feminists discourses rather than class and nation. Thatcher apothegm “There’s no such thing as society”. Analysis of racism, sexism and the culture industry possessed more appeal than the British working class. This reflects an anti-statist, decentered view of social organization. How to conceive of relations between these de-centered communities? 1) Cross-identification (new rainbow alliances). 2) Dialogic (concept in which the otherness of each participant remains intact). Celebration of the other (alterity) become the powerful opposition to monoculturalism and gender models of nation. Cultural Studies becomes the voice of the other from the 70s on.
Cultural Studies began to celebrate commercial culture/mass culture in a move called ‘cultural populism’. Popular products have quasi-political effects independently of educational and critical discourse.
Two incommensurable perspectives. 1) One sees media, TV, cinema as instruments of economic, ethnic, gender domination. Owned by large corporation it assists the reproduction of social system by allowing certain ideas/images to get audience. Media generated by the top of the social hierarchy and seek reproduction. 2) One sees culture from the bottom up, focusing on forms (music) at odds with capitalist social order (by deferment of gratification, for example). Although it might be appropriated by mainstream and used in conservative ways also represents a possibility of eruption, dissonance and alternative imagination of reality.

Critical Terms for Literary Study (Frank Lentricchia & Thomas McLaughlin, 1990)

CRITICAL TERMS FOR LITERARY STUDIES.
Edited by Frank Lentricchia and Thomas McLaughlin
University of Chicago Press, 1990
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Introduction:
Literary theory escaped from the academy and became part of popular culture. The mindset of Literary Theory has become pervasive in our time
Nature and function of Literary Theory: Schools of thought are joined together by a shred commitment to understanding how language and other systems of signs provide frameworks which determine how we read, more generally, make sense of what we experience construct our identity, produce meaning in the world
Language should be the focus of alternation of theory
Language sets the boundaries within which we read, so terms should ordinary and common. (this volume challenges this)
Historicity of terms + social cultural debates
A reading is a rhetorical act within a huge cultural debate

1. REPRESENTATION ( W. J. T. Mitchell)

Aristotle = Modes of Representation
Representation depend on a series of common codes.
Representation in language is symbolic, it works around the object.
Represent = describes, narrate, dramatize
Representation is not divorced from political + ideological questions.
Representation is about language (structuralists)

2. STRUCTURE (John Carlos Rowe)

Term which recognizes the interrelation time x space as fundamental to the concept of structuralism. (Modern view sees time subordinate to space)
STREW
Structure = relations among elements shaped by historical situation
Structure = essential properties of the artwork and ultimately the essence of aesthetic experience
Structure as simulation (Barthes)
Structure = dissect in order to understand/ ‘humanize’

3. WRITING (Barbara Johnson)

Fascination with the mechanics of written word (thinking about writing)
Barthes: split between work (Great Literature) and text (open ended). Closure x Subversion, Product x Practice
Writing = the structure of the authority itself

4. DISCOURSE (Paul A. Bové)

Links to forms of power
Hierarquization of authority x subservience, identity x difference, etc.
Basic categories of understanding and thought
Institutionalized system for the production of knowledge and language.
The study of discourse leads to a study of institutions
Discourse: method to the description/meaning
An address (speech or writing) dealing with a particular topic

5. NARRATIVE (J. Hillis Miller)

Repetition of narrative form have to do with affirmation, culture-making function rather than critical or subversive function
Propp’s Morphology of Folktale + Struturalists
Narrative depends on the trope (figurative language) of personification. A system of figures deconstructed and blindly reaffirmed
Tells particulars of an act/occurrence/course of events, presented in writing/drama/cinema/radio

6. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE (Thomas McLaughlin)

Twists the meaning of the word (TROPE=FIGURE)
Rhetoric = study of figure/study of persuasion
Metaphor = transfer of meaning/compressed analogy
Personification = characteristics of human subject projected in an animal/object
Apostrophe = object cannot hear of respond to the speech
Simile = comparison of terms ‘lips like red wine’
Metonymy = one things stands for other ‘crown = king’ deep identity; historical world of events situation
Differ from ordinary language by presenting images/relations/mediations giving insight to the power of language itself

7. PERFORMANCE (Henry Sayre)

Using knowledge rather than just possessing it
Giving emphasis to what is ‘outside’ a sense of ‘being in the present’, in its immediacy/role played
Concept or activity upon which community is formed (ritual)

8. AUTHOR (Donald E. Pease)

Someone who originates/causes/imitates something
Auctor x Author (power/authority x delineator of a text)
“Whereas Barthes declares the author is dead, the text he thereby produces is not without an author. In Barthes’ metatextual account of the writing activity” (p. 112)

II
9. INTERPRETATIO (Steven Mailloux)

Theory of interpretation = a general account of how readers make sense of texts
2 approaches = historicizing (context of production) and allegorizing (universal)
Interpretation is a politically-interested act of persuasion

10. INTENTION (Annabel Patterson)

Wrestle with the imprecision of language
Literary intention will shift from formalism towards history and theory of culture

11. UNCONCIOUS (Françoise Meltzer)

Inferred existence, transcendental idealism
The way we imagine the unknowable. The way we explain the unexplainable

12. DETERMINACY/INDERTERMINACY (Gerard Graff)

Anti-hermeneutics = indeterminacy = ambiguity
Correctness of interpretation
Science argues for one and only meaning

13. VALUE/ EVALUATION (Barbara Herrstein Smith)

Stem when cultural activity is a focus of discussion
‘Classic’, ‘Masterpiece’
Evaluation: continuous process/ value fixed

14. INFLUENCE (Louis A. Renza)

Affirmative relations between past/present literary texts or their authors
Handing down a testimony of argument throughout the centuries (Bloom conforming to canon/authority

15. RHETORIC (Stanley Fish)

Art of analyzing and presenting local exigencies
Persuading method/ literary voice

III
16. CULTURE (Stephen Greenblatt)

A network of negotiations for the exchange of good/ideas and people

17. CANON (John Guillory)

System/principle of selection by which same authors/texts deemed worthier of preservation than others
Exclusion of groups of people
Canon formation = historic ways societies have regulated reading practices
A work that creates advance is a canon

18. LITERARY HISTORY (Lee Paterson)

Different from history of literature (epic, sonnet, ode) chronology of forms (intrinsic approach) [Literature cannot say anything history had not authorized]
Extrinsic = forces that caused, or were expressed by literary texts
Literature: a form of social practice; texts do not merely reflect social reality but create it

19. GENDER (Myra Jehlen)

Designates sexual identity and its associated characteristics. Culture, history, society define gender, not nature (sex)
Role played

20. RACE (Kwane Anthony Appiah)

Matin Tupper ‘The Anglo-Saxon Race’ (1850)
A concept historically fixed as the biological stock

21. ETHNICITY (Werner Sollors)

Symbolic boundaries of identification
Boundary-supporting verbal strategy

22. IDEOLOGY (James H. Kavanagh)

Cultural complexity of language
System of political ideas/system of representations