Cultural Studies and Cultural Theory
Cultural Studies and Cultural Theory
Cultural Studies and Cultural Theory
Subculture
A subculture is a group of people within a culture that differentiates itself from the parent culture
to which it belongs, often maintaining some of its founding principles. Subcultures develop their
own norms and values regarding cultural, political and sexual matters. Subcultures are part of
society while keeping their specific characteristics intact. Examples of subcultures
include hippies, goths, bikers and skinheads. The concept of subcultures was developed
in sociology and cultural studies.[1] Subcultures differ from countercultures.
While exact definitions vary, the Oxford English Dictionary defines a subculture as "a cultural
group within a larger culture, often having beliefs or interests at variance with those of the larger
culture."[3] As early as 1950, David Riesman distinguished between a majority, "which passively
accepted commercially provided styles and meanings, and a 'subculture' which actively sought a
minority style ... and interpreted it in accordance with subversive values".[4] In his 1979
book Subculture: The Meaning of Style, Dick Hebdige argued that a subculture is a subversion to
normalcy. He wrote that subcultures can be perceived as negative due to their nature of criticism
to the dominant societal standard. Hebdige argued that subculture brings together like-minded
individuals who feel neglected by societal standards and allow them to develop a sense of
identity.[5]
In 1995, Sarah Thornton, drawing on Pierre Bourdieu, described "subcultural capital" as the
cultural knowledge and commodities acquired by members of a subculture, raising their status
and helping differentiate themselves from members of other groups.[6] In 2007, Ken Gelder
proposed to distinguish subcultures from countercultures based on the level of immersion in
society.[7] Gelder further proposed six key ways in which subcultures can be identified through
their:
1. often negative relations to work (as 'idle', 'parasitic', at play or at leisure, etc.);
2. negative or ambivalent relation to class (since subcultures are not 'class-conscious' and
don't conform to traditional class definitions);
3. association with territory (the 'street', the 'hood', the club, etc.), rather than property;
4. movement out of the home and into non-domestic forms of belonging (i.e. social groups
other than the family);
5. stylistic ties to excess and exaggeration (with some exceptions);
6. refusal of the banalities of ordinary life and massification.[7]
Sociologists Gary Alan Fine and Sherryl Kleinman argued that their 1979 research showed that a
subculture is a group that serves to motivate a potential member to adopt the artifacts, behaviors,
norms, and values characteristic of the group.
The evolution of subcultural studies has three main steps:
Characteristics[edit]
In his 1994 book, Introducing Cultural Studies, orientalist scholar Ziauddin Sardar lists the
following five main characteristics of cultural studies:[6]
The objective of cultural studies is to understand culture in all its complex forms, and
analyzing the social and political context in which culture manifests itself.
Cultural study is a site of both study/analysis and political criticism. For example, not only
would a cultural studies scholar study an object, but they may also connect this study to a
larger political project.
Cultural studies attempt to expose and reconcile constructed divisions of knowledge that
purport to be grounded in nature.
Cultural studies has a commitment to an ethical evaluation of modern society.
One aim of cultural studies could be to examine cultural practices and their relation
to power, following critical theory. For example, a study of a subculture (such as white
working-class youth in London) would consider their social practices against those of
the dominant culture (in this example, the middle and upper classes in London who control
the political and financial sectors that create policies affecting the well-being of white
working-class youth in London).
3.Identity formation
Identity formation, also called identity development or identity construction, is a
complex process in which humans develop a clear and unique view of themselves and of
their identity.[1]
Self-concept, personality development, and values are all closely related to identity
formation. Individuation is also a critical part of identity formation. [2][3][4] Continuity and inner
unity are healthy identity formation, while a disruption in either could be viewed and
labeled as abnormal development; certain situations, like childhood trauma, can
contribute to abnormal development. Specific factors also play a role in identity formation,
such as race, ethnicity, and spirituality.
The concept of personal continuity, or personal identity, refers to an individual posing
questions about themselves that challenge their original perception, like "Who am
I?"[5] The process defines individuals to others and themselves. Various factors make up
a person's actual identity, including a sense of continuity, [6] a sense of uniqueness from
others, and a sense of affiliation based on their membership in various groups like family,
ethnicity, and occupation. These group identities demonstrate the human need for
affiliation or for people to define themselves in the eyes of others and themselves.
Identities are formed on many levels. The micro-level is self-definition, relations with
people, and issues as seen from a personal or an individual perspective. The meso-level
pertains to how identities are viewed, formed, and questioned by immediate communities
and/or families. The macro-level are the connections among and individuals and issues
from a national perspective. The global level connects individuals, issues, and groups at
a worldwide level.[7]
Identity is often described as finite and consisting of separate and distinct parts (e.g.,
family, cultural, personal, professional).
Identity formation has to do with the complex manner in which human
beings establish a unique view of self and is characterized by continuity
and inner unity. It is therefore highly related to terms such as the self,
self-concept, values, and personality development. The goal of personal
identity formation is to establish a coherent view of self through the
process of normal human development. Abnormal development could
be viewed as the establishment of an incoherent self and characterized
by discontinuity or the lack of inner unity. Although the benchmarks of
identity formation are most easily observed at the adolescent and adult
levels of development, a fledgling identity for a person develops during
his/her childhood experiences. At the core of identity formation is the
human personality, but psychologists have also employed this term to
speak of subcategories such as racial, ethnic, social class, gender role,
spiritual, and sexual identity.
4.Mass media
Mass media is communication—whether written, broadcast, or spoken—that
reaches a large audience. This includes television, radio, advertising, movies,
the Internet, newspapers, magazines, and so forth.
The current level of media saturation has not always existed. As recently as
the 1960s and 1970s, television, for example, consisted of primarily three
networks, public broadcasting, and a few local independent stations. These
channels aimed their programming primarily at two‐parent, middle‐class
families. Even so, some middle‐class households did not even own a
television. Today, one can find a television in the poorest of homes, and
multiple TVs in most middle‐class homes. Not only has availability increased,
but programming is increasingly diverse with shows aimed to please all ages,
incomes, backgrounds, and attitudes. This widespread availability and
exposure makes television the primary focus of most mass‐media
discussions. More recently, the Internet has increased its role exponentially as
more businesses and households “sign on.” Although TV and the Internet
have dominated the mass media, movies and magazines—particularly those
lining the aisles at grocery checkout stands—also play a powerful role in
culture, as do other forms of media.
What role does mass media play? Legislatures, media executives, local
school officials, and sociologists have all debated this controversial question.
While opinions vary as to the extent and type of influence the mass media
wields, all sides agree that mass media is a permanent part of modern
culture. Three main sociological perspectives on the role of media exist: the
limited‐effects theory, the class‐dominant theory, and the culturalist theory.
Limited-effects
Class-dominant
The class‐dominant theory argues that the media reflects and projects the view of a
minority elite, which controls it. Those people who own and control the corporations that
produce media comprise this elite. Advocates of this view concern themselves particularly
with massive corporate mergers of media organizations, which limit competition and put big
business at the reins of media—especially news media. Their concern is that when ownership
is restricted, a few people then have the ability to manipulate what people can see or hear. For
example, owners can easily avoid or silence stories that expose unethical corporate behavior
or hold corporations responsible for their actions.
The issue of sponsorship adds to this problem. Advertising dollars fund most
media. Networks aim programming at the largest possible audience because
the broader the appeal, the greater the potential purchasing audience and the
easier selling air time to advertisers becomes. Thus, news organizations may
shy away from negative stories about corporations (especially parent
corporations) that finance large advertising campaigns in their newspaper or
on their stations. Television networks receiving millions of dollars in
advertising from companies like Nike and other textile manufacturers were
slow to run stories on their news shows about possible human‐rights
violations by these companies in foreign countries. Media watchers identify
the same problem at the local level where city newspapers will not give new
cars poor reviews or run stories on selling a home without an agent because
the majority of their funding comes from auto and real estate advertising. This
influence also extends to programming. In the 1990s a network cancelled a
short‐run drama with clear religious sentiments, Christy, because, although
highly popular and beloved in rural America, the program did not rate well
among young city dwellers that advertisers were targeting in ads.
Critics of this theory counter these arguments by saying that local control of
news media largely lies beyond the reach of large corporate offices
elsewhere, and that the quality of news depends upon good journalists. They
contend that those less powerful and not in control of media have often
received full media coverage and subsequent support. As examples they
name numerous environmental causes, the anti‐nuclear movement, the anti‐
Vietnam movement, and the pro‐Gulf War movement.
While most people argue that a corporate elite controls media, a variation on
this approach argues that a politically “liberal” elite controls media. They point
to the fact that journalists, being more highly educated than the general
population, hold more liberal political views, consider themselves “left of
center,” and are more likely to register as Democrats. They further point to
examples from the media itself and the statistical reality that the media more
often labels conservative commentators or politicians as “conservative” than
liberals as “liberal.”
Media language can be revealing, too. Media uses the terms “arch” or “ultra”
conservative, but rarely or never the terms “arch” or “ultra” liberal. Those who
argue that a political elite controls media also point out that the movements
that have gained media attention—the environment, anti‐nuclear, and anti‐
Vietnam—generally support liberal political issues. Predominantly
conservative political issues have yet to gain prominent media attention, or
have been opposed by the media. Advocates of this view point to the
Strategic Arms Initiative of the 1980s Reagan administration. Media quickly
characterized the defense program as “Star Wars,” linking it to an expensive
fantasy. The public failed to support it, and the program did not get funding or
congressional support.
Culturalist
The culturalist theory, developed in the 1980s and 1990s, combines the other two theories
and claims that people interact with media to create their own meanings out of the images and
messages they receive. This theory sees audiences as playing an active rather than passive
role in relation to mass media. One strand of research focuses on the audiences and how they
interact with media; the other strand of research focuses on those who produce the media,
particularly the news.
Theorists emphasize that audiences choose what to watch among a wide range of
options, choose how much to watch, and may choose the mute button or the VCR
remote over the programming selected by the network or cable station. Studies of
mass media done by sociologists parallel text‐reading and interpretation research
completed by linguists (people who study language). Both groups of researchers find
that when people approach material, whether written text or media images and
messages, they interpret that material based on their own knowledge and
experience. Thus, when researchers ask different groups to explain the meaning of a
particular song or video, the groups produce widely divergent interpretations based
on age, gender, race, ethnicity, and religious background. Therefore, culturalist
theorists claim that, while a few elite in large corporations may exert significant
control over what information media produces and distributes, personal perspective
plays a more powerful role in how the audience members interpret those messages.
Cinema
The major in Cinema and Cultural Studies (CCS) considers film as a form of representation
in and of itself and in relation to other disciplines such as literature, art, and theatre. By
emphasizing the field of cultural studies, the major is designed to show how cultural forms
such as cinema and media develop and interact with each other and with social, historical,
and economic forces. The major's core courses place strong emphasis on critical thinking
about cinema and other cultural forms. Students are also taught "media literacy"-the ability to
read the many images we encounter every day in an age when images are being used for
manipulation as never before. Students are encouraged to apply knowledge in the
classroom to practical situations through internships in film and advertising industries or
through independent research. Students majoring in Cinema and Cultural Studies are
prepared to undertake graduate study in many humanistic disciplines and to enter into
careers in the film industry, communications, advertising, marketing, and public relations.
"I was forewarned of the changes by Simon Beaufoy, the screenwriter," Swarup says.
And he's still happy. "The film is beautiful. The plot is riveting. The child actors are
breathtaking."
Swarup has one niggle. He worries how that scene of Hindu mobs murdering
Muslims will play when the film opens in India next week. "People in India are
sensitive about how they're portrayed, so there will be criticisms. But a Bollywood
director recently told me Slumdog Millionaire's failing was that it wasn't extreme
enough to be truly Indian. India has a genius for recycling its contradictions."
Swarup rewards my sceptical frown with an endearing smile.
But why would Swarup complain? From the window table of our restaurant in
London's Victoria, bus after bus rolls by advertising Slumdog Millionaire. He points
them out. His debut novel, already translated into 37 languages and garnering
awards around the world, is back in the bestseller lists. And Swarup is basking in the
glow of the four Golden Globes that the film won this week. Not to mention the 11
Bafta nominations. Paulina, our waitress, notices his novel on the table and tells me
she loved the film. "It was about real struggles against adversity," she says. "It really
spoke to me."
Fair enough, Paulina, but what you don't know is that the Slumdog Millionaire from
Mumbai's meanest streets was born in London's rather more genteel Golders Green.
He came to life on Swarup's laptop while the diplomat was finishing his British tour
of duty at the Indian high commission in 2003.
"I had two months left in London before I went home," recalls Swarup, 48. "My
family [wife Aparna, sons Aditya and Varun] had already returned to Delhi, partly
because our children were not really rooted as Indians. We had been in Turkey,
Washington, Addis Ababa and London and it was time to go home. My eldest son
supported the England cricket team. His hero was Andrew Flintoff. Terrible!
"After they had gone, I thought: 'Now is the time to write the novel.' But I'm not one
of those writers who wants to spend four pages describing a sunrise. There are so
many of them in India. I'm a sucker for thrillers and I wanted to write one. I'm much
more influenced by Alastair MacLean and James Hadley Chase. I'm no Arundhati
Roy."
A catalyst was Major Charles Ingram, convicted for cheating his way to winning the
British version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? "If a British army major can be
accused of cheating, then an ignorant tiffin boy from the world's biggest slum can
definitely be accused of cheating."
Swarup's conceit was that an uneducated hero becomes a contestant on Who Wants
to be a Millionaire? and, through the sort of miraculous fortune that would make an
atheist believe in a benevolent personal deity, is asked a series of questions that he
can answer. Ram's success makes everyone suspicious. How can a slumdog know
who Shakespeare was? Q&A's retort is that Ram's adventures in orphanages and
brothels, with gangsters and Bollywood celebrities, have taught him the answers to
each question India's Chris Tarrant poses. The novel's seductive opening sentences
are: "I have been arrested. For winning a quizshow."
Swarup is the second Indian novelist to have hit the headlines recently with a slum-
dwelling chai wallah hero who gets rich quick. The other was Aravind Adiga, whose
novel White Tiger won the Booker last October. Like Adiga, Swarup is from a middle-
class Indian family. His parents were lawyers in Allahaband. His grandfather's
library, which little Vikas ploughed through, had a first edition of Mein Kampf next
to Isaiah Berlin's Two Concepts of Liberty. Swarup is many things, but no slumdog.
"This isn't social critique," he objects. "It's a novel written by someone who uses what
he finds to tell a story. I don't have firsthand experience of betting on cricket or rape
or murder. I don't know if it's true that there are beggar masters who blind children
to make them more effective when they beg on the streets. It may be an urban myth,
but it's useful to my story."
Swarup knew that he had to complete his novel before leaving London. "I'd been
made India's director of relations with Pakistan. It was going to be 9am to 9pm every
day. So I had to finish the book before I got the plane home."
He wrote quickly - one productive weekend yielded 20,000 words. "It was only with
the 11th agent I sent chapters to that I got anywhere. I emailed Peter Buckman the
first four and a half chapters on Wednesday. On Thursday he wrote back. The
following week we met. He told me he wanted to sell the book. The only problem was
there was no book."
Like Adiga's White Tiger, however, Swarup's novel is unlikely to win plaudits from
the Indian tourist board. Its depiction of Swarup's homeland is hardly diplomatic.
"You might think that, but I have had no complaints, not from the Mumbai police
[whom he depicts as child torturers] or from anyone in the government. My country
respects artistic freedom."
Before Q&A, Swarup's last published story was written half a lifetime ago. It was
called The Autobiography of a Donkey. No one yet has optioned the film rights.
"Maybe I only had one great idea that everybody can enjoy: the story of an underdog
who wins. I'm not so sure I'll ever be so lucky to come across another story."
His second novel, Six Suspects, was published last year. But this complex, Indian-set
whodunnit has a major problem. "The problem is my nine-year-old son. He claims to
have read Six Suspects. He told me he wanted an MP3 player for finishing it. I said
no. Now he threatens that if I don't he'll name the murderer from my book on
Facebook."
Our time is up. After lunch, Swarup must fly back to South Africa. Is it difficult to be
a writer and a diplomat? "I can't write in the crevices of a working day. So it's hard."
Does he dream about giving up the day job? "No! There's no better time to be an
Indian diplomat. India is flavour of the season. While the rest of the world is going to
hell, India and China are doing well. I revel in my job".
The mall invites for participating in the fantasy of future possibilities. Thus,
the spectacle turns into a performance that the customer/ consumer imitates
and participates in. It is also a theatrical performance that is interactive, in
which the spectacle comes alive with the potential consumer. The encircling
vistas, long-spread balconies and viewing points at every floor add to the
spectacle, by providing a “prospect” of shopping.
Eclecticism is yet another feature of the mall, where, “the world is under one
roof”- where a “Kalanjali” or “Mann Mantra” share space with “Shoppers
Stop” or “Life Style” and “Madras Mail” shares space with “McDonald’s”
and multiplexes, imparting a cosmopolitan experience. Thus eclecticism and
a mixing of products, styles and traditions are a central feature of the mall
and consumer experience.
Media Culture
Media studies and its role in the construction of cultural values, circulation of
symbolic values, and its production of desire are central to Cultural Studies
today. Cultural Studies of the media begins with the assumption that media
culture is political and ideological, and it reproduces existing social values,
oppression and inequalities. Media culture clearly reflects the multiple sides
of contemporary debates and problems. Media culture helps to reinforce the
hegemony and power of specific economic, cultural and political groups by
suggesting ideologies that the audience, if not alert, imbibes. Media culture is
also provocative because it sometimes asks us to rethink what we know or
believe in. In Cultural Studies, media culture is studied through an analysis of
popular media culture like films, TV serials, advertisements etc.- as Cultural
Studies believes in the power of the popular cultural forms as tools of
ideological and political power.
Cultural analysis
As a discipline, cultural analysis is based on using qualitative research methods of
the arts, humanities, social sciences, in particular ethnography and anthropology, to
collect data on cultural phenomena and to interpret cultural representations and
practices; in an effort to gain new knowledge or understanding through analysis of
that data and cultural processes. This is particularly useful for understanding and
mapping trends, influences, effects, and affects within cultures.
There are four themes to sociological cultural analysis:
1. Adaptation and Change
This refers to how well a certain culture adapts to its surroundings by being used and
developed. Some examples of this are foods, tools, home, surroundings, art, etc.
that show how the given culture adapted. Also, this aspect aims to show how the
given culture makes the environment more accommodating.
2. How culture is used to survive
How the given culture helps its members survive the environment.
3. Holism, Specificity
The ability to put the observations into a single collection, and presenting it in a
coherent manner.
4. Expressions
This focuses on studying the expressions and performance of everyday culture.
Cultural Analysis in the Humanities[edit]
This developed at the intersection of cultural studies, comparative literature, art
history, fine art, philosophy, literary theory, theology, anthropology. It developed
an interdisciplinary approach to the study of texts, images, films, and all related
cultural practices. It offers an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of cultural
representations and practices.
Cultural Analysis is also a method for rethinking our relation to history because it
makes visible the position of researcher, writer or student. The social and cultural
present from which we look at past cultural practices—history— shapes the
interpretations that are made of the past, while cultural analysis also reveals how the
past shapes the present through the role of cultural memory for instance. Cultural
analysis understands culture, therefore, as a constantly changing set of practices
that are in dialogue with the past as it has been registered through texts, images,
buildings, documents, stories, myths.
In addition to having a relation to disciplines also interested in cultures as what
people do and say, believe and think, such as ethnography and anthropology,
cultural analysis as a practice in the humanities considers the texts and images, the
codes and behaviours, the beliefs and imaginings that you might study in literature,
philosophy, art history. But cultural analysis does not confine the meanings to the
disciplinary methods. It allows and requires dialogue across many ways of
understanding what people have done and what people are doing through acts,
discourses, practices, statements. Cultural analysis crosses the boundaries between
disciplines but also between formal and informal cultural activities.
The major purpose of cultural analysis is to develop analytical tools for reading and
understanding a wide range of cultural practices and forms, past and present.