John Storey
|
Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
—
published
1993
|
|
|
Cultural Theory and Popular Culture
—
published
1994
—
18 editions
|
|
|
Inventing Popular Culture: From Folklore to Globalization
—
published
2003
—
8 editions
|
|
|
What Is Cultural Studies?: A Reader
—
published
1996
—
6 editions
|
|
|
Cultural Consumption and Everyday life
—
published
1999
—
3 editions
|
|
|
From Popular Culture to Everyday Life
—
published
2014
—
10 editions
|
|
|
An Introductory Guide to Cultural Theory and Popular Culture
—
published
1993
—
7 editions
|
|
|
Theories of Consumption
|
|
|
Culture and Power in Cultural Studies: The Politics of Signification
—
published
2010
|
|
|
Livy, History of Rome I: A Selection
|
|
“Whereas in the past a worker lived in his or her work, he or she now works in order to live outside his or her work.”
― Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction
― Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction
“Having a good time’ may be made to seem so important as to override almost all other claims; yet when it has been allowed to do so, having a good time becomes largely a matter of routine. The strongest argument against modern mass enter- tainments is not that they debase taste – debasement can be alive and active – but that they over excite it, eventually dull it, and finally kill it. . . . They kill it at the nerve, and yet so bemuse and persuade their audience that the audience is almost entirely unable to look up and say, ‘But in fact this cake is made of sawdust’.”
― Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
― Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
“[David Manning White] maintains that critics romanticize the past in order to castigate the present.”
― Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
― Cultural Studies and the Study of Popular Culture
Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite John to Goodreads.















