cultural studies
Looks at less complex texts or anything else (art, music, etc.) and how it affects us as a culture
The most influential theory within cultural studies such as Marxism, culturalism, structuralism, poststructuralism, psychoanalysis, and politics of difference (feminism, race, ethnicity, and postcolonialism)
Power, race, class, and gender
Subordination to the rules
Rules are necessary (enable us)
Marxism
Social and economic theory developed by Karl Marx in the 19th century
Analyses the impact of the ruling class on the laborers
Culturalism
Central importance of culture as an organizing force in human affairs
Individuals are determined by their culture
Individual is unable to leave their own culture but rather can only realize themselves within it
Structuralism
Interpretation and analysis of aspects of human cognition, behavior, culture, and experience, which focuses on relationships of contrast between elements in a conceptual system
poststructuralism
a set of attitudes and a style of critique that developed in critical response to the growth and identification of the logic of structural relations
Feminism
Gender relations
Belief that women should be allowed the same rights, power, and opportunities as men and be treated in the same way
postcolonialism
Race as a social construct
Study of the effects of colonialism on cultures and societies
Cultural Studies referring to the text by Chris Barker
Connection of different theories to power
Definition of power
Processes that generate and enable any form of social action, relationship, or order
Power while certainly constraining is also enabling
Popular culture is the ground on which this consent is won or lost
Identity as an important factor
—> Consent is won = we agree to something
—> Consent is lost = we don’t agree to it anymore
Which discourses do we see and why are they presented in a specific way? How is power
Body presentation (body shape, face, clothes, skin color)
Educational text, lifestyle text, etc.
Target/aim (successful businessman vs. everyday girl)
What draws attention
Colors of the cover itself (colorful vs less color to make it more serious)
Who is addressed
What is problematic
Why does it appeal to certain kinds of people and why not
representation
Text and artifacts of any kind never objectively represent an empirical reality
All representations and their meaning is inherently unstable
Cultural texts are never neutral (they have different discourses)
Meaning only exists in relation (symbol itself doesn’t have a meaning)
The less a representation opposes its own constructedness the more political power it has (when you don’t realize the discourse and you take it for granted)
The Mercator Map
Not even a world map can be a neutral representation (can have
different discourses and is therefore not entirely objective)
deconstruction
Method of reading a text to figure out where the text contradicts itself (taking the text apart)
Meaning is not stable
Language is self-referencing (one doesn’t make sense without the other)
Language can never represent the reality we just use it as a tool
Text in a book is just language referring to more language
When u are analyzing literature your analyzing language
Zuletzt geändertvor 2 Jahren