British Cultural Studies is a comprehensive introduction to the British tradition of cultural studies. Graeme Turner offers an accessible overview to the central themes that have informed British cultural studies; language, semiotics, Marxism and ideology, individualism and subjectivity and discourse. Presenting a history of British cultural studies and focusing on the work of such pioneers as Raymond Williams, Richard Hoggart, E.P. Thompson, Stuart Hall and the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, the second edition is fully revised to include new issues in cultural studies and to update key debates and references. New sections * The influence of postmodernism * The politics of pleasure identified with the 'New Revisionism' * Foucault and discourse * The politics of cultural studies * Gender and Race in the history of British Cultural Studies * A fully updated and comprehensive bibliography
Graeme Turner is an Australian professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland, Federation Fellow, Past President of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, Director of the Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies, and Convenor of the ARC Cultural Research Network.
He is one of the key figures in the development of cultural and media studies in Australia. His work is used in many disciplines: cultural and media studies, communications, history, literary studies, and film and television studies. Turner's research interests include Australian film and media, issues in Australian Nationalism, popular culture, celebrity, and talkback radio. His current project investigates the role of television in a post-broadcast era increasingly dominated by new media formats such as the Internet.
emmmm... no sé qué puntuación darle a este libro, lmfao. es puramente teórico, pero bueno. está okay. demasiada semántica para mi gusto. yo qué sé. le doy tres estrellas por darle algo.
A nice introduction to the British version of cultural studies. As a summary of the main ideas and key modes of inquiry, it's quite helpful. As a history of cultural studies in Britain it jumps around too much. It's organized around topics within the discipline so that each section returns to previously discussed time periods. This makes it a little confusing to follow and to keep track of which texts were important for what reasons and when. Overall it's a nice introduction that focuses on the Birmingham Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies and discusses many of the important British contributions to the field of cultural studies.
This book presents a timeline of cultural studies in Great Britain. All the big stars are here, and this book does a great job showing the evolution of theory in cultural studies from early its Arnoldian beginnings down to contemporary times. It doesn't delve into great depth on the individual theories succeeding each other, rather the theories are presented chronologically, with each generation of thinkers building and revising the work that came before. An interesting and concise historiographical study.