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Cultural Studies: Representation and Identity

What is Cultural Studies Anyway?

Richard Johnson
Starting Questions, Main Ideas & Structure Summary Applications
Basic Intro (1), (2)


  Starting Questions:

  1. What is culture?  What is popular culture?  And Cultural Studies?
  2. What is a text?  Where are its textual boundaries?  How do we deal with its readers or subjective forms in and of the text?
  3. In reading a text, how do we avoid giving an evaluative reading or objective study?  How do we examine a literary text from a "cultural" perspective?
  Main Ideas:

There are three main models of cultural studies research: production-based studies, text-based cultural studies, and studies of lived cultures.  It may be more transformative to rethink each moment in light of the others, importing objects and methods usually developed in relation to one moment into the next.

  Structure:
 


I. Definitions:
  1. CS defined as an intellectual and political tradition (its history and main concerns)
  2. CS defined in its relations to the academic disciplines
  3. CS defined in terms of theoretical paradigms
  4. CS defined by its characteristic objects of study.
II. Theoretic Concerns: --strategies short of codification
  1. subjectivity -- with its pressures and tendencies, movement and combination.
  2. circuit of culture = circuit of capital and its expanded reproduction and a circuit of the production and circulation of subjective forms.
  3. publication/abstraction vs. the private and concrete
  4. forms of study: culturalist, and structuralist
  5. circulation of public and private forms
III. Three Moments of Cultural Studies and their transformations
  1. production;
  2. text-based analysis
  3. culture as lived culture

Article Summary

I. Definitions: p. 78 "Actually it is not definition or codification that we need but pointers to further transformations. "

  1. CS defined as an intellectual and political tradition (its history and main concerns)
  2. CS defined in its relations to the academic disciplines -- interdisciplinary p. 79
  3. CS defined in terms of theoretical paradigms
  4. CS defined by its characteristic objects of study.
II. Theoretic Concerns:
  1. subjectivity -- with its pressures and tendencies, movement and combination.
  2. circuit of culture = circuit of capital and its expanded reproduction and a circuit of the production and circulation of subjective forms.
  3. publication/abstraction vs. the private and concrete
  4. forms of study: culturalist, and structuralist
  5. circulation of public and private forms
III. Three Moments of Cultural Studies and their transformations
  1. production;
  2. text-based analysis
  3. culture as lived culture
  4. p. 108  The moments, though separable, are not in fact discreet, therefore we need to trace what Marx would have called 'the inner connections' and 'real identities' between them.

Source
Johnson, Richard.  "What is Cultural Studies Anyway?What is Cultural Studies: A Reader.  Ed. John Storey.   London: Arnold, 1996.