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Pickering

Popular Culture

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-1-84860-200-7
Verlag: Shanaya Wagh
Erscheinungstermin: 30.06.2010
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage
Popular culture is as debated as it is pervasive. It is pervasive in that the symbolic worlds in which we live and out of which we construct sense are, in many different ways, understood as and within popular culture. It is debated in that it has often been polarized as a negative or positive counterpart to other dimensions of cultural activity. Volume One establishes the historical dimension necessary for the study of popular culture, showing how popular culture has developed over the past two centuries in the West, and how it has operated as a site of aesthetic debate and contestation as well as of communal pleasure and social interaction. The second and third volumes are devoted to the different theoretical perspectives and analytical approaches to popular culture. These have mainly developed since the late-nineteenth century, though pioneering discussion from this time has recently become sidelined. Along with some examples of such early discussion, the volumes feature contributions from the 'culture and civilization' tradition, the Frankfurt school, Chicago sociology, western Marxism, early cultural studies (rejecting the term 'culturalism'), structuralist and poststructuralist approaches, folkloristics, feminism and men's studies, postmodernism and postcolonial studies. The final volume concentrates on the questions and issues involved in the aesthetics and ethics of popular culture and their relation to the quality of public life. Volume Four specifically includes articles that deal with issues in popular culture studies that remain ongoing and in dynamic movement, or are in various ways contentious and unresolved. Volume One: Historical Perspectives on Popular Culture Volume Two: Theoretical Approaches Volume Three: Theoretical Paradigms Volume Four: Aesthetics, Ethics and Cultural Politics

Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9781848602007
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-1-84860-200-7
  • Verlag: Shanaya Wagh
  • Erscheinungstermin: 30.06.2010
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: Four-Volume Set Auflage
  • Serie: Sage Benchmarks in Culture and Society
  • Produktform: Kartoniert
  • Gewicht: 3317 g
  • Seiten: 1704
  • Format (B x H x T): 156 x 234 x 142 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt

Autoren/Hrsg.

Herausgeber

Pickering, Michael

Pickering, Michael

Michael has published over a hundred articles and chapters in edited collections. These cover a number of areas including popular music, racism and popular culture, imperialism and theatrical history, Mass Observation, working-class writing, news and documentary, stereotyping and representation, humour and comedy, creativity and cultural production, media and memory, and historical hermeneutics. Overall his work covers the fields of media and communication studies, social and cultural history, and the sociology of art and culture. Michael has also written extensively on research methods, having edited collections on methods in cultural studies and memory studies, and been co-author of Researching Communications (Bloomsbury, 2007), along with David Deacon, Peter Golding and Graham Murdock. He has recently completed a major AHRC research project on music in the workplace, with Marek Korczynski of Nottingham University and Emma Robertson of La Trobe University. Their book, Rhythms of Labour: The History of Music at Work in Britain, is published by Cambridge University Press. With Emily Keightley, Michael is currently involved in a research project funded by the Leverhulme Trust on media and memory. Their book The Mnemonic Imagination is published by Palgrave Macmillan.

VOLUME ONE: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON POPULAR CULTURE
Popular Culture in History
"Punch and Judy" and Cultural Appropriation - Scott Cutler Shershow
The Legitimization of the Circus in Late Georgian England - Marius Kwint
Queen Caroline and the Sexual Politics of Popular Culture in London, 1820 - Anna Clark
The Decline of Saint Monday - Douglas Reid
Bloods in the Street: London street culture, "industrial literacy", and the emergence of mass culture in Victorian England - Edward Jacobs
Working-Class Culture and Working-Class Politics in London, 1870-1900: Notes on the remaking of a working class - Gareth Stedman Jones
Empire Theatres and the Empire: The popular geographical imagination in the age of empire - Andrew Crowhurst
Teddy's Bear and the Sociocultural Transfiguration of Savage Beasts into Innocent Children, 1890-1920 - Donna Varga
History in Popular Culture
Empathy and Enfranchisement: Popular histories - Jerome de Groot
John Ford's Drums along the Mohawk: The making of an American myth - Edward Countryman
Gender and Culture of Empire: Toward a feminist ethnography of the cinema - Ella Shohat
A Fantasy of Witnessing - Gary Weissman
The Ghost in the Luggage: Wallace and Braveheart: Post-colonial "pioneer" identities - Sally J. Morgan
Archive Aesthetics and the Historical Imaginary: Wisconsin death trip - John Corner
Romancing the Road: Road movies and images of mobility - Ron Eyerman and Orvar Löfgren
VOLUME TWO: FROM MASS CULTURE CRITIQUE TO POPULAR CULTURE STUDIES
Popular Culture - Early Considerations
On a Possible Popular Culture - Thomas Wright
What is Culture? - Derek Kahn
Popular Culture and Mass Culture - Control and Consent
A Theory of Mass Culture - Dwight Macdonald
The Problem of High Culture and Mass Culture - D.W. Brogan
Daydreams and Nightmares: Reflections on the criticism of mass culture - Edward Shils
The Literary Imagination and the Explanation of Socio-Cultural Change in Modern Britain - Paul Filmer
Culture Industry Reconsidered - Theodor Adorno
Hegemony and Mass Culture - Mark Gottdiener
The Concept of Cultural Hegemony - T.J. Jackson Lears
Beyond "Mass Culture" - Eugene Lunn
Murder, Mass Culture, and the Feminine: A view from the 4.50 from Paddington - Angela Devas
Popular Culture Studies - Outlines and Overviews
Popular Culture: A "teaching object" - Tony Bennett
Notes on Deconstructing "The Popular" - Stuart Hall
What's in a Name? Popular culture theories and their limitations - Jean Franco
What is Cultural Studies Anyway? - Richard Johnson
Cultural Studies at the Crossroads - Graham Murdock
Professing the Popular - Simon During
Social Power and Symbolic Sites: In the tracks of cultural studies - Michael Pickering
Cultural Studies and the Challenge to English - Michael Pickering
New Life: Cultural studies and the problem of the "popular" - Scott Cutler Shershow
Post-Feminism and Popular Culture - Angela McRobbie
Creativity, Communication and Musical Experience - Keith Negus and Michael Pickering
When the University Went "Pop": Exploring cultural studies, sociology of culture, and the rising interest in the study of popular culture - Lynn Schofield Clark
VOLUME THREE: CULTURAL FORMATIONS AND SOCIAL RELATIONS
Sociological Approaches
Folk Culture and the Mass Media - Thelma McCormack
Processing Fads and Fashions: An organizational-set analysis of cultural industry systems - Paul M. Hirsch
Market Structure, the Creative Process, and Popular Culture: Toward an organizational reinterpretation of mass culture theory - Paul DiMaggio
The Study of Culture: Cultural studies and British sociology compared - Steve Baron
Biographical Boundaries: Sociology and Marilyn Monroe - Graham McCann
Divide and Conquer: Popular culture and social control