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Cultural studies is an academic field that explores the dynamics of contemporary culture (including the politics of popular culture) and its social and historical foundations. Cultural studies researchers investigate how cultural practices relate to wider systems of power associated with, or operating through, social phenomena. These include ideology, class structures, national formations, ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, and generation. Employing cultural analysis, cultural studies views cultures not as fixed, bounded, stable, and discrete entities, but rather as constantly interacting and changing sets of practices and processes. Cultural studies was initially developed by British Marxist academics in the late 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, and has been subsequently taken up and transformed by scholars from many different disciplines around the world. Cultural studies is avowedly and even radically interdisciplinary and can sometimes be seen as anti-disciplinary. A key concern for cultural studies practitioners is the examination of the forces within and through which socially organized people conduct and participate in the construction of their everyday lives. Cultural studies combines a variety of politically engaged critical approaches drawn including semiotics, Marxism, feminist theory, ethnography, post-structuralism, postcolonialism, social theory, political theory, history, philosophy, literary theory, media theory, film/video studies, communication studies, political economy, translation studies, museum studies and art history/criticism to study cultural phenomena in various societies and historical periods. Cultural studies seeks to understand how meaning is generated, disseminated, contested, bound up with systems of power and control, and produced from the social, political and economic spheres within a particular social formation or conjuncture. The movement has generated important theories of cultural hegemony and agency. Its practitioners attempt to explain and analyze the cultural forces related and processes of globalization. During the rise of neoliberalism in Britain and the U.S., cultural studies both became a global phenomenon, and attracted the attention of many conservative opponents both within and beyond universities for a variety of reasons. A worldwide movement of students and practitioners with a raft of scholarly associations and programs, annual international conferences and publications carry on work in this field today. Distinct approaches to cultural studies have emerged in different national and regional contexts. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about cultural studies 25
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Ghana's Heritage Of Culture
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The Country and the City
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Neue Gesellschaft/Frankfurter Hefte
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Communication, Culture and Hegemony: From the Media to Mediations
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Michael Vickery. Society, economics and politics in pre-Angkor Cambodia: the 7th-8th centuries. 486 pages, 5 maps, 4 plates, 3 tables, 1998. Tokyo: Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies for UNESCO/The Tokyo Bunko; 4-89656-110-4 paperback ¥5000 & $5
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Art Rules: Pierre Bourdieu and the Visual Arts
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Zwischen Rauschen und Offenbarung : zur Kultur- und Mediengeschichte der Stimme
Spoilt Rotten: The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality
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Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies
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Tid att städa: Om vardagsstädningens praktik och politik.
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Animal: Moments of Affect, Moments of Pain
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Making the invisible visible. Reclaiming women's agency in Swedish film history and beyond
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Movement of knowledge. Medical humanities perspectives on medicine, science and experience
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Craft sciences
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Se hennes öde. Undersökning av en ordlös roman från 1920-talets Tyskland
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Sveriges avrasifiering. Svenska uppfattningar om ras och rasism under efterkrigstiden
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Future/Present: Arts in A Changing America
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Living Handbook of Narratology
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kritische berichte
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Karnataka Samskruti Sameekshe
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Karnataka Samskritiya Poorva Peethike
Schriften zur Kulturwissenschaft
Im Labyrinth der Vernunft
Lesbarkeit der Welt
Kultur und soziale Praxis
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