1 what is popular culture? i corner/abhijit bora course outline... · 1 what is popular culture? -...

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1 What is Popular Culture? - - aus: STOREY, John: Cultural Theory and Popular Culture. London et al. (PearsonlPrenUce Hall) 2001 - I Before we consider in detail the different ways in which popular culture has been defined and analyzed, I want to outline some of the general features of the debate which the study of popular culture has generated. It is not my intention to pre-empt the specific findings and arguments which will be presented in the following chapters. Here I simply wish to map out the general conceptual landscape of popular culture. This is, in many ways, a daunting task. As Tony Bennett points out, 'as it stands, the concept of popular culture is virtually useless, a melting pot of confused and contradictory meanings capable of misdirecting inquiry up any number of theorrt- ical blind alleys'.' Part of the difficulty stems from the implied otherness which is always absendpresent when we use the term 'popular culture'. As we shall see in the chapters which follow, popular culture is always defined, implicitly or explic- itly, in conuast to other conceptual categories: folk culture, mass culme, dominant culture, working-class culture, etc. A full definition must always take this into account. Moreover, as we shall also see, whichever conceptual category is deployed as popular culture's absentlpresent other, it will always powerfully affect the con- notations brought into play when we use the term 'popular culture'. Therefore, to study popular culture we must first confront the difficulty posed by the term itself. That is, 'depending on how it is used, quite different areas of inquiry and forms of theoretical definition and analytical focus are suggested'." The main argument which 1 suspect readers will take from this hook is that popular culture is in effect an empty conceptual category, one which can be filled in a wide variety of often conflicting ways, depending on the context of use. Culture In order to define popular culture we ht need to deiine the term 'culture'. Raymond Wllliams calls culture 'one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language'.' Wllllams suggests three broad defimtions. First of all, culture can be used to refer to 'a general process of lnteuectual, spiritual and aesthetic

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1 What is Popular Culture? - -

aus: STOREY, John: Cultural Theory and Popular Culture. London et al. (PearsonlPrenUce Hall) 2001

- I Before we consider in detail the different ways in which popular culture has been defined and analyzed, I want to outline some of the general features of the debate which the study of popular culture has generated. It is not my intention to pre-empt the specific findings and arguments which will be presented in the following chapters. Here I simply wish to map out the general conceptual landscape of popular culture. This is, in many ways, a daunting task. As Tony Bennett points out, 'as it stands, the concept of popular culture is virtually useless, a melting pot of confused and contradictory meanings capable of misdirecting inquiry up any number of theorrt- ical blind alleys'.' Part of the difficulty stems from the implied otherness which is always absendpresent when we use the term 'popular culture'. As we shall see in the chapters which follow, popular culture is always defined, implicitly or explic- itly, in conuast to other conceptual categories: folk culture, mass culme, dominant culture, working-class culture, etc. A full definition must always take this into account. Moreover, as we shall also see, whichever conceptual category is deployed as popular culture's absentlpresent other, it will always powerfully affect the con- notations brought into play when we use the term 'popular culture'.

Therefore, to study popular culture we must first confront the difficulty posed by the term itself. That is, 'depending on how it is used, quite different areas of inquiry and forms of theoretical definition and analytical focus are suggested'." The main argument which 1 suspect readers will take from this hook is that popular culture is in effect an empty conceptual category, one which can be filled in a wide variety of often conflicting ways, depending on the context of use.

Culture

In order to define popular culture we h t need to deiine the term 'culture'. Raymond Wllliams calls culture 'one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language'.' Wllllams suggests three broad defimtions. First of all, culture can be used to refer to 'a general process of lnteuectual, spiritual and aesthetic

16 W/,at i s l'opcrtor Cuiture?

Day, Gary (ed.), Readings hi I'oprrlnr (:ulti.irc, Lonilon: ~Vlacmillan, 1990. A mixed collcc- rion of essays, romp inteicsting and useiol, nrhc~.s tilo unsure abimr how seriously to take poprrlar culture.

Du Gay, Paul, Stuart Hall, Llnda Jancs, Hugh Mackay and Keith Negor, Doing Cultural Siudies: The Story of the Sony Wlilbi??an, London: Sagc, 1997. Ail cxcellcnr ilitroducrio<~ to sornc oi thc key issues in culti~ral srildies. Worth reading for the explanation of 'the circuit of ciilruie'.

Fiskc, Jnhn, Underitonding Pop2*liir- Culture, London: (inwin Hyman, 1989. A clear presenra- tion of his particular approach to the study o f popular cnlture.

Fiskr, John, Reoding the Popular, 1.ondon: Unwin Hyrnan. 1989. A collection of essays analyzing difkrent examples of popular culti~ie.

(;oodall, Peter, High Culrrure, Popular Cu1rur.e: The lung debole, Sr Lronaids: Alleli & Unwin, 1995. The book traces the debare between high and popular culture, with particu~ lar, hot nor exclusive, reference to the Australian experience, from the eighteenth century to the prcscnt day.

Milner, Andrew, Cot?rentporar?, C~~ltuialStudies, 2nd edn, London: UCI. Press, 1994. A useful inrl-odnction to contemporary culmral theory.

Mukerii, Chandra and Michael Schudson (eds), Rethinking Po/>~,lnr Crriture, Berkeley: Universiry of California Press, 1991. A collenion of essays, with an informed and interesr- inp introducrion. The book is helpfully divided into sections on differeim a~,lproaches m

- Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991. A useful and interesting collection of essays on cultural theory and popular culture.

Strinati, Dominic, An Introd~ictron to Theories of Popular Cultidre, London: Routledge, 1995. A clear and comprehensive introduction to theories of popular culture.

Tolson, Andrew, Mediations: Text and discoullre in media s tudi~r , London: Edward Arnold, 1996. An excellent introduction to the study of popular media culture.

Turner, Graerne, British Culturn1 Studies, 2nd edn, London: Routledge, 1996. Still the best inrroduction ro British cultural studies.

Notes

w Ha\,cn: Yale Univcr sit" Press. 1957, D. xv.

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1 What i s P o p u l a r C u l t u r e ?

1. Tony Bennett, 'Popular culture: a teaching objcct', Screen Edrrcotion, 34, 1980, p. 18. 2. Ihid., p. 20. 3. Raymond Williams, Keywords, London: Fontaaa, 1983, p. 87. 4. Ibid., p. 90. 5. Ihid. 6. Ihid. 7. Craeme Turner, British Cultui.al Studies: An introduction, 2nd edn, London: Routledge,

1996, p. 182. 8. James W. Carey, 'Overcoming resisrance to cultural studies', in W'hat Is Cultural Stud-

ies: A Render, edited by John Storcy, London: Edward Arnold, 1996, p. 65. 9. Stuarr Hall, 'Some paradigms in cultural studies', Annali, 3, 1978, p. 23.

10. See Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, The German Ideology (srudenr edirion), edited and introduced by C. J. Arthur, London: Lawrcncc & Wishart, 1974.

11. I<arl Maia: 'Preface' and 'Introduction' to a Contribution to the Critique of Politicdl Economy, Peking: Foreign Languages I'ress, 1976, p. 3.

12. Tony Bcnnen, 'Popular culture: defining nur terms', in Popular Culture: Themes rind isscres 1 , Milron Keynes: Open University Press, 1982, p. 81.

13. Marr, 'Preface' and 'Inrroducrion' to a Contribution to the Critique of Polit;cal Economy, p. 5.

14. Bertolr Brechr, On Theatre, rianslatsd by John Willert, London: Methuen, 1978, pp. 1.70-1.

198 Notes

1.5. Srual-r Mall, 'The rediscovery of ideologu: rhc i-ctu)~, 01 the rcpl.rsscd in media studics', in Subjcctiuity nnd .Sociul RcIairoi?s, cdired by Vcronica Berches and James Donald, Milron I<eynes: Open University Press, 1985, p. 36.

16. See Stuart Hall, 'Notcs on dcco~~srrucri~ig "the pi>pt~lal-"', in Cultural Ti,eory and PI>/I~,/OF Culture: A Reodcr, 2nd cdn, edircd hy John Storey, Hemel Hempsread: Prenticc Hall, I 9 Y X .

17. Williams, Keywords, p. 237. 1.8. Bcnnerr, 'l'opi~lat. culrure: a reaching object', pp. 20-1 19. Pierre Bourdieu, Disti,zcfio,r: A sociol crjtique of lhe ludp,nent of taste. rranslared by

Richard Nice. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University IJr.css, 1984, p. 5 . 20. For a discussion of Shakcsprare as pop~llar crilrure in nineteenrh-centi~ry America, see

I.,IMICIILC L~villr, Hi8/,bri,w/Jaor(ib~: The eInergencc ~ ~ ~ u l t u r a l hierorchg ti, America, Cambridge, Mass.: I-laivard University Press, 1988.

21. See '"Expecting Rain": Opera as popular culture?‘, in Hzglr-Po/,, edited by Jim Collins, Oxford: Hlackwcll, forrhcoming, 2000.

22. See Bourdieu, Distinction, p. 5. 23. S te Williams, Keywords, pp. 236-8. 24. Hall, 'Notes oo deconstructing "the popular"', pp. 448-9. 25. This is rhr principal theme of the 'production of culture' approach. See Paul Di-

Maggro, 'Cultural entreprener~rship in ninereenth-century Boston: the creation of a n organizational base for high culture in i\rnerica3, in Celturol Tl~eory and Po/~tulnr Cultirre: A Reader, 2nd edn, edited by John Storey, Hemel Hempsread: Prentice Hall, 1998.

26. John Fiske, Understanding Popular Culture, London: Unwin Hyman, 1989, p. 31. 27. Simon Frith, Sound Effects: Youth, leisure and the politics of rock, Londoo: Constable,

1983, p. 147. 28. Fiske, Understnizdjng Fopirlar Culture, p. 27. 29. Richard Maltby, 'Inrrodocrion', in Dreams for Sale: Popular culture ix the 20th cantuq,

edited by Richard Malrby, London: Harrap, 1989, p. 11. 30. Andrew Ross, No Respect: I~~lellectualr and popular calture, London: Routledge, 1989,

p. 7. 31. See Duncan Webster, Lookn Yonder!, London: Comedia, 1988. 32. Malrby, 'Introducrion', p. 14. 33. Ibid. 34. See Nicholas Abeicl-ombie, Stephen Hill and Bryan S. Turner, The Dominant 1deolog)t

Thesis, London: Allen & Unwin, 1980. 35. Bermerr, 'Popular culture: a teaching object', p. 27. 36. Antonio Gramsci, 'Hegemony, inrellectuals, and the stare', in Cultural Theory nnd Popu-

lar Cultme: A Render, 2nd edn, edited by John Storey, Hemel Hempsread: Prentice Hall, 1998, p. 210.

37. 1 call my approach neo-Gramscian in ol-drr to create some respectful theorcticai and political distance bcrween my own work and that of Antonio Gramsci. I am conscioos of the facr that 1 a m ,,sing an approach developed ro analyze the general field of polirics to ~~ndersrand the particular rerrain of popular culrure.

38. Gramsci, Selections from Prison Notebooks, p. 161. 39. Tony Bennett, 'Popular cultlire and the rurn ro Gramsci', in Cultural Theory and Popular

Culture: A Reader, 2nd edn, edited by John Srorey, Hemel Hempsread: Prentice Mall, 1998, p. 221.

40. Clranral rMooffc, 'Hegemony ind ideology i i ~ Gramsci'. in Cirltrrre, Ideology and .Sorial I'rocess. edited lhy Tony Bennerr, Colin Mrrcer anil Janer \Voollacotr, Milron I<eynes: Open University P ~ e s r , 1981, p. 231.

41. Raymond Williams, 'Basc and sopcrsri-octurc in Marxist culrr~ial thcory', m Pi.oblefzs i~ Moterialism and Calture, London: Verso, 1980.

41. Sruait Hall, 'Grcodingldecodin~', in Cr*/trtr-e, Media, Langaqqr, edited by Stuart Hall, Dorothy Hobson, Andrew Lowe and I'sill Willis, London: Hurchinsoa, 1980. David Morley, The Nntiorrlvide Audience, London: BFI. 1980. For critical commentary nee John Storey, Cu l t~ ra l Studies and the Study of Pop,*Lr Cultirre, Ed~nburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1996, and John Storey, Culturai Conremnptzon and Everyday Life. I.ondon: Edward Arnold, 1999.

43. See Hall, 'Notes an dcconsrur~crinp the popular'. 44. Tony Bennett, 'The polit~cs of the popdar', in Po/,ular Cstlti~re and Social Relatiorzs,

p. 20. 4 5 Turner, British Cultrrral Studies, p. 6. 46. Lawrence Grossberg, It's a Sin: Essop a n postmodemism, politics and cultirre, Sydney:

Power Publications, 1988, p. 7. 47. Raymond Williams, Culture ond Soctct)r, Harmonilsworrh: Penguin, 1963, p. 11. 48. See Pcter Burke, Popular. C~lltere itr Eady Alodern Europe, Aldershor: Scolar I'ress,

1994. 49. R. J. Morris, Class awd Class Consciousness h the Irtdusrrral Reiiolutron 1780-1850,

landon: Macmillan, 1979, p. 22. 50. Bennett, 'Popular culture: defining our rerms', p. 86. 51. Dick Hehdiee. 'Aanalararna, or can pop save us all?' New Statesman e" Socict),. . ~

9 ~ e c e m b e r i 9 8 8 . 52. Geoff~.ey Nowell~Srnith, 'Popular culture', New Formntions, 2, 1987, p. 80.

London: Cambridge University Piers. 1960,

3. Ibid., p. 46. 4. Ibid., p. 48. 5. Ibid., p. 89. 6. Ibid., p. 179. 7. Ibid., p. 31. 8. Ibid., p. 163. 9. Ibid., pp. 163-4.

10. Ibid., p. 163. 11. Ibid., p. 76. 12. Ibid., p. 69. 13. Ibid., p. 76. 14. Ibid., p. 193. 15. Ibid., pp. 80-1.