Drawing on Stuart Hall’s influential “Notes on deconstructing ‘the popular’” [Hall, S. (1981). In R. Samuel (Eds.), People’s history and socialist theory (pp. 227–240). London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.], this essay maps out some of the major shifts in cultural studies’ relationship to popular culture over the past several decades. It concludes with a call for cultural studies to find ways to work from the terrain of the popular, rather than merely studying that terrain, or trying to “translate” its scholarly analyses for popular audiences. This is a necessary path to fulfilling its mission as a political project
An earlier version of this commentary was presented at the 2021 Union for Democratic Communications ...
This article unpacks the concept of ‘cultural populism’ in multiple ways, and explores its value for...
Popular music and society had been thought inseparable long before the union was made official, at f...
‘Popular’, ‘culture’ and ‘folk’ are discussed by Raymond Williams as highly charged keywords: semant...
An earlier version of this commentary was presented at the 2021 Union for Democratic Communications ...
Of all the recurring themes in the history of cultural studies, it is arguably the relationship betw...
Stuart Hall sought to internationalise theoretical debates and to create Cultural Studies as interdi...
Edited by Julian Henriques and David Morley with Vana Goblot Stuart Hall: Conversations, Projects...
This article explores the significance of the work of Stuart Hall for social and political anthropol...
In this article, I argue that the idea of articulation links three different dimensions of Stuart Ha...
This article takes up the theme that a significant but often ignored source for British Cultural Stu...
This article offers an assessment of the Stuart Hall’s role as a socialist public intellectual durin...
This article starts from the observation that popular culture resides in a contradictory space. On t...
Stuart Hall, leading public intellectual and campaigner in the British New Left, was a progenitor of...
A handbook essay that explains cultural studies apprroaches to the study of popular music
An earlier version of this commentary was presented at the 2021 Union for Democratic Communications ...
This article unpacks the concept of ‘cultural populism’ in multiple ways, and explores its value for...
Popular music and society had been thought inseparable long before the union was made official, at f...
‘Popular’, ‘culture’ and ‘folk’ are discussed by Raymond Williams as highly charged keywords: semant...
An earlier version of this commentary was presented at the 2021 Union for Democratic Communications ...
Of all the recurring themes in the history of cultural studies, it is arguably the relationship betw...
Stuart Hall sought to internationalise theoretical debates and to create Cultural Studies as interdi...
Edited by Julian Henriques and David Morley with Vana Goblot Stuart Hall: Conversations, Projects...
This article explores the significance of the work of Stuart Hall for social and political anthropol...
In this article, I argue that the idea of articulation links three different dimensions of Stuart Ha...
This article takes up the theme that a significant but often ignored source for British Cultural Stu...
This article offers an assessment of the Stuart Hall’s role as a socialist public intellectual durin...
This article starts from the observation that popular culture resides in a contradictory space. On t...
Stuart Hall, leading public intellectual and campaigner in the British New Left, was a progenitor of...
A handbook essay that explains cultural studies apprroaches to the study of popular music
An earlier version of this commentary was presented at the 2021 Union for Democratic Communications ...
This article unpacks the concept of ‘cultural populism’ in multiple ways, and explores its value for...
Popular music and society had been thought inseparable long before the union was made official, at f...