british cultural materialism

7
Name: Gohil Khanjaniba M. Class: MA(Part-1)(Semester-2). Roll No: 15. Subject: The Cultural Studies. Presentation Topic: British Cultural Materialism. Submitted To: The Department Of English, Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University, Bhavnagar.

Upload: khanjanigohil

Post on 06-Feb-2015

190 views

Category:

Education


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: British Cultural Materialism

Name: Gohil Khanjaniba M. Class: MA(Part-1)(Semester-2). Roll No: 15. Subject: The Cultural Studies. Presentation Topic: British Cultural Materialism. Submitted To: The Department Of English,

Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji

Bhavnagar University,

Bhavnagar.

Page 2: British Cultural Materialism
Page 3: British Cultural Materialism

• What is Cultural Studies?

• British Cultural Materialism. Cultural Studies

• New Historicism.

Cultural Materialism = Cultural Studies.

Edward Burnet Tylor’s “Primitive Culture” (1871).

Widest ethnographic sense- knowledge, belief, art, morals, law, etc. acquired by man as a member of society.

Cultural Materialism began in 1950s with the work of F.R.Leavis and heavily influenced by Matthew Arnold.

Page 4: British Cultural Materialism

Raymond Williams talks about attributes of working class and elite class.

We can see people as masses. Modern Britain has two trajectories: As a preserver of the past.

Transformation of the status as a norm.Four methods of academic literary criticism: Aestheticism,

Formalism, Antihistoricism and Apoliticism.Leavis promoted ‘The great Tradition’.

Page 5: British Cultural Materialism

Theorists like Gorgy Luckas, Theodor Adorno, Louis Althusser, Max Horkheimer, Mikhail Bakhtin and Antonio Gramsci.

Antonio insists the concept of cultural hegemony.

A sense of reality for most people …beyond which it is very difficult for most members of society to remove.

Lukacs developed that what he called “a reflection theory” .

Page 6: British Cultural Materialism

• Feminism was also important for cultural materialists.

• Dialogic form of meaning within narrative and class struggle.

• Capitalists continues reproducing themselves without fear of revolution.

Page 7: British Cultural Materialism