Cultural Studies Now Seminar Series – Seminar 3

Overview

Cultural Studies, in its British incarnation, was in effect the intellectual front of the political movement of the New Left. This movement became consolidated in the UK after 1956 when the Suez crisis and Soviet invasion of Hungary jointly precipitated the emergence of an anti-imperial and non-doctrinaire group of Marxist activists and intellectuals, centred initially on the journal New Left Review. Following his appointment in 1969 as Acting Director of the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS), which had been established by Richard Hoggart at the University of Birmingham, Stuart Hall gradually took the place of Raymond Williams as the leading intellectual voice of this loosely affiliated formation. Over the next decade, Hall worked with his colleagues and graduate students to develop a theoretical basis and critical methodology for the politically engaged analysis of culture (considered as a social totality), leading to landmark texts such as Policing the Crisis (1978) and The Empire Strikes Back (1982).

This seminar series will begin by asking how British cultural studies both understood and analysed ‘Culture’, before focusing on its lessons for ‘Study’ (i.e. methodology) and its capacity (or otherwise) to enable us to analyse the world today (‘Now’). Sessions are open to all PhD students at LAHP institutions. If possible, please commit to attend all three. I will begin each session with an introduction to some important issues raised in the readings, before turning over to a discussion of the readings, and how they relate to your research.

Seminar 3 (26th March – Online) seminar will turn to the third term of our title and ask: ‘what does cultural studies have to offer us now?’ We will address this question by discussing some recent examples of conjunctural analysis that have often also engaged with some of the limitations of earlier iterations and its methodological and conceptual difficulties. We will pay particular attention to the challenges for cultural studies of the expansion and mutation of globalization, geopolitical and ecological crises, technological change, and the huge range of temporal and spatial scales that these factors require us to engage.

Link to tickets for the series are found here

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