Posts tagged: university
For anyone entering into college who don’t know what they want to study, I suggest cultural studies. It’s not taught everywhere… but you can take a gander around my blog (adailyriot) and a few blogs provides as well as this article to learn what its’ all about.
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Cultural Studies is a relatively new academic phenomenon, having emerged in the 1960s as an ‘anti-disciplinary’ discipline—a project that explicitly sought to bridge gaps between the study of Literature, History, Sociology, Anthropology and Communication. Marxist in its orientation, it was and is an intellectual endeavor aimed at understanding, theorizing, critiquing and otherwise taking seriously the role of culture as a crucial terrain of political and ideological contestation. Cultural Studies is probably best understood as the politically committed, theoretically informed, radically self-reflexive and historical-materialist analysis of cultural processes and practices, where the commitment to imagine a more humane, more democratic societyhas always been a guiding assumption in the field from its early formations in post-war Britain. In this sense, Cultural Studies is not just an academic discipline and a particular approach within the wider of field of the study of culture (one with implicit, but distinctive epistemological assumptions and ways of working); it is also a political project that seeks to construct what Larry Grossberg calls a “radical political history of the present.”
Cultural Studies understands culture in a very broad way, as a way of life and a ‘way of struggle’, including all the practices and phenomena of all kinds—media representations; media and literary texts; consumer culture; youth subcultures; performance and display practices, as well as other aspects of popular culture and everyday life. That is why, it would be impossible to define Cultural Studies by looking at the kind of objects it studies. While it is true that actually existing Cultural Studies work has tended to concern itself with a very limited number of cultural objects and issues, a fact which has contributed to the vagueness of Cultural Studies as a project (as in the conflation of cultural studies with popular culture studies), Cultural Studies cannot be defined by a particular kind of object or set of objects; and as Grossberg puts it, “[Y]ou can do cultural studies of almost anything” (246). In the same way, Cultural Studies cannot be defined by reference to a specific set of methods, despite the fact that certain methods, such as semiotics, have come to be associated with most of actually existing work in cultural studies, a fact that has ultimately limited the scope and range of the whole field. In other words, Cultural Studies is not an object-driven or method-driven discipline. It is driven, instead, by a set of methodological/epistemological moves. Here are five interrelated epistemological assumptions that inform more robust work in Cultural Studies:
The Need for Political Commitment and the Analysis of the “Social Whole”
Because Cultural Studies understands culture politically, the notions of ‘social totality/whole’, and, in more dominant versions, that of ‘articulation’ are central in Cultural Studies. The significance of an event, phenomenon, or practice—be it ideological, political, economic, or cultural—cannot be properly assessed outside a dialectical understanding of its place in society as a whole. Cultural Studies examines cultural phenomena in the context of their social whole (which, here, refers to the concrete unity of all interacting spheres of social life), that is, by pursuing their hidden interactions and interconnections in real life. This way we are in a better position to understand how social, economic, and political forces act on cultural production, distribution, and reception; and how cultural forces, in turn, act on the social, economic, and political.
The Need for a Multiplicity of Methods and Interdisciplinarity
In most Cultural Studies, there is a realization that traditional disciplinary methods have their merits and limits, but that they work better when they are deployed together in the analysis of cultural phenomena and processes. No single method is complete; and to get as close as possible to a better and more complex understanding of cultural practices and processes, combining methods becomes indispensable. As Johnson and company put it, “a multiplicity of methods is necessary because no one method is intrinsically superior to the rest and each provides a more or less appropriate way of exploring some different aspect of cultural process” (Johnson et al. 42). And it is in this nuanced sense that Cultural Studies is also interdisciplinary. But while Cultural Studies understands culture in a broad way, as a way of life and encourages interdisciplinary perspectives and strategies, it, at the same time, demands a rigorous engagement with cultural texts, practices, and forms of all kind.
The Need for Self-Reflexivity
As Cultural researchers, we are ‘inside’ our object of study. We approach our topics with a particular cultural biography. Gramsci notes somewhere that the starting point of critical reflection—in this case, research—is the consciousness of who one is. Far from being a negative source of research bias, knowing our partialities enables us to correct our biases. Self-reflexivity puts our work in perspective, highlighting its merits, as well as its limits.
The Need and Commitment to Theory
As Larry Grossberg puts it, “Cultural Studies is always theoretical. It is absolutely committed to the necessity of theoretical work, to what Karl Marx called the detour through theory.” It is not committed to theory for theory’s sake; it is rather interested in how theory and theoretical work can be deployed to better understand and transform specific historical conjunctures, contexts, and formations.
The Need to Think Historically and Spatially
Cultural research activity is also always temporally located; it takes place at a certain historical moment/conjuncture. The time dimension is an essential perspective in cultural theory and practice. It not only greatly enhances the subtlety with which cultural phenomena is explored, but helps us to recognize the historical content and specificity of our work (including the theoretical categories we work with), as well. Cultural research activity is also always spatially located: It takes place somewhere. Issues of space and place are inherent in every research project, and recognizing the particularities of the places we study and where we study them could be enlightening.
Dear University Alumni Office,
I’m sorry to hear that the university’s $750 million endowment has fallen in value to $500 million because of the recession and because your bank died. I’m also sorry to hear that you’re dealing with declining enrollment due to the fact that middle-class families are no longer willing or able to bet their homes on a $45,000-a-year higher education for their children. I really am.
So, what I want to know is, why are you wasting money on glossy fundraising brochures full of meaningless synonyms for the word “Excellence”? And, why are you sending them to ME? Yes, I know that I got a master’s degree at your fine institution, but that master’s degree hasn’t done jack shit for me since I got it! I have been unemployed for the past TWO YEARS and I am now a professional resume-submitter, sending out dozens of resumes a month to employers, and the degree I received in your hallowed halls is at the TOP OF IT and it doesn’t do a fucking thing.
You know, maybe if you wanted a little bit of money from me (and these days you’d get about $3) maybe you should send me a fancy color brochure admitting your role in the bubble economics that got us all in to this mess.
For example, since 1987, higher education expenses have gone up 450 percent, while personal income in this country has gone up 87 percent, making tuition IMPOSSIBLE to afford without special financing. But, during this time, you were thriving because people could come up with the cash in two ways:
1. Get a home equity loan and use the inflated value of their house to pay for their kid to get drunk and/or raped at your school and then lose the house when the market crashed.
2. Get a federal loan.
HAD IT OCCURRED TO YOU THAT NEITHER OF THESE SOURCES OF MONEY ACTUALLY EXIST? THAT IT WAS BEING MANUFACTURED BECAUSE YOU MADE PEOPLE THINK THAT ONE OF YOUR DEGREES WAS NECESSARY TO CLIMB TO THE TOP OF THE BUBBLE?
Oh yes, federal loans. I’ve got $40,000 of those, which are in “forebearance” right now because I’m unemployed, meaning that the feds are paying the interest for a while, which is convenient for me, but not for our government which is now owned by China. You know, the idea behind federal loans was that it would allow more students to attend your university, not let you INFLATE your tuition to obscene levels! I mean, what the fuck were you spending the $16,000 per semester on, anyway? I was in a public policy program, so that meant we got to sit in classrooms and listen to Professor God up at the front of the lecture hall glorify Himself and Creation as He saw it and talk about how much smarter he was than anyone else and how much he’d learned at MIT and the RAND Corporation.
Really, that’s about all you did for us — gave us a lecture hall, gave us an arrogant bastard to listen to, and gave us a room full of computers we could use sometimes, and you gave us a degree that employers look at and say “This guy knows how to write reports. Amusing.” And I will be paying for this privilege until I am 51 years old.
So I’m sorry that the economy’s been rough on you. Maybe, if you wanted to save a little money, you could stop printing and sending brochures to my parents’ house (oh yeah, that’s where I live because I can’t afford rent on ANYTHING). And, maybe I’ll donate a little bit of money to you in 2030, when I get the loans for your imaginary education PAID OFF!
Sincerely yours,
Alumnus