Provider: Kate Liu / 劉紀雯 What is Culture? What is Cultural Studies?
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the five interacting loci of cultural practices in the 'circuit of Culture' Representation, Regulation, Identity, Production, Consumption *discussion: What is culture for you? Is MacDonald's part of Taiwanese culture? |
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What is
Culture? (from Representation Hall, 1997, p. 3)
1. traditional ones: "the best that has been thought and said" in a society. It is the sum of the great ideas, as represented in the classic works of literature, painting, music and philosophy-the 'high culture' of the age. 2. the widely distributed forms of popular music, publishing, art, design and literature, or the activities of leisure time and entertainment, which make up the everyday lives of the majority of 'ordinary people'-what is called the 'mass culture' or the 'popular culture' of an age. 3. whatever is distinctive about the 'way of life' of a people, community, nation or social group. --shared values/meanings of a group or of society.
"Culture ...is not so much a set of things ...as a process, a set of practices. Primarily, culture is concerned with the production and the exchange of meanings-'the giving and taking of meaning'-between the members of a society or group."
"Culture is involved in all those practices...which carry meaning and value for us, which need to be meaningfully interpreted by others, or which depend on meaning for their effective operation. Culture, in this sense, permeates all of society" |
Circuit of Culture--the five interacting loci of cultural practices
Representation, Regulation, Identity, Production*, Consumption: (definitions from Media and Identities series. London: Sage, 1997.) *another way of defining "production" is to see the production of meaning at different cultural moments: "material production, symbolic production, textual production, and the 'production in use' of consumption" (J. Storey 2). |
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Basic
assumptions of cultural studies:
"Marxism informs cultural studies in two fundamental ways. 1. to understand the meanings of culture we must analyze it in relation to the social structure and its historical contingency 2. cultural studies assumes that capitalist industrial societies are societies divided unequally along ethnic, gender, generational and class lines. ...culture is one of the principal sites where this division is established and contested: culture is a terrain on which takes place a continual struggle over meaning, in which subordinate groups attempt to resist the imposition on meanings which bear the interests of dominant groups. It is this which makes culture ideological." (Storey p. 3) |