With over 40,000 copies sold, Cultural Theory and Practice has been the indispensable guide to studying culture for generations of students. Here is everything students need to know, with all the key concepts, theories and thinkers in one comprehensive, authoritative yet accessible resource.
Teaching students the foundations of cultural studies - from ideology, representation and discourse to audiences, subcultures and cultural policy - this revised Unmatched in coverage and used world-wide, this is the essential companion for all students of cultural studies, culture and society, media and cultural theory, popular culture and cultural sociology.
A good introduction to cultural studies, yet…from the perspective of mostly white, privileged, exclusively 'Western' theorists. It could also become very repetitive in its claims, and is sometimes too vague when it comes to certain aspects of various philosophies…
It was a frustrating read as Barker seems to have a 'cluttered' way of writing. Besides, some of the chapters were very well written and easy to read, whereas other chapters were so incoherent that I was questioning whether Barker was understanding the subject himself.
This was a surprisingly hard read when compared to say, Hall's seminal Representation. Barker's style of writing seems to get in the way of the message. That said, the content of the book is wide in breadth and very informative, providing a succinct overview on the cultural studies landscape from its early years up till the present iteration of post structuralism and post modernism, grappling with Gramsci, Althusser, Foucault, and Hall in one fell swoop.
I would view this book as closer to an encyclopedia rather than a textbook or reader. It is dense, covering a large array of topics but very rarely going into more than a cursory analysis. Useful to have lying around if you need to look up a dictionary definition of concepts in cultural studies.
I read this book a couple of years ago during my first year of my bachelors and found it illuminating but also somewhat scattershot .
An othe rbook I had to read for school. Although the topoics it discusses are interesting, I had to read the book two times in order to really comprehend what it was really sayaing.
this content slight spoiler to the content of the book; or perhaps not since i just mentioned some of the concept; but im still gonna mark this as containing spoiler. : D
Just finished reading the book for like an hour ago so my head are still suffering from repercussion due to a lot of knowlege got cramped into my small headspace so down below it's a review of myself on the content of the book and whether it serves its function. (spoiler: for the latter, it does)
on the content of the book, i would say it is pretty comprehensive, at least for someone who has dabbled in some issues that are central to the discussion of Cultural Studies, as well as has known briefly on the figures and their theories and the critiques of such theories. By going from points to points on the theories constituitive of Cultural studies and the terminologies that are essential to the readers' understanding of it to the changing of the discipline and finally in its application; it goes pretty logically and overal does not omit anything as far as I am concerned; in fact i kinda felt i understand a lot more of the debates i saw online when they repeatedly go on and on about their relevance to cultural studies when i didn't see such connection. For example, the place of Delueze and the concept of rhizomorphic (?).
However, I am subjecting my comments to my own lack of knowledge so in the spirit of cultural studies (more specifically on someone's theory but i have forgotten because i have a brain of a gold fish), i would tell what the book is about on grounds of the things that i found lacking in its content. (yay application =))) and also ironic regarding the book's position on pragmatism lmao im enjoying this way too much).
So for its level, it's an introductory book, it perhaps aims to provide a comprehensive and exhaustive look on the wide ranges of issues dealt with in cultural studies; and as an interdiscipline it undoubtably contains an even wider range of theories and knowledges (yes foucault i have learnt lmao) it definitely gonna be more harder to include everything into a 400-ish-page book; so for certain problems it just got touched upon the surface; such as the concept of ecology and its relevance to cultural studies; or the idea of cultural left; both got mentioned and regarded as pretty essential but i don't find much information on such in the book; or at least sufficient enough to my understanding; so that's the first minus point; but to answer the 2nd point i made above; yes the book does do its job as an introduction to a field that is mostly known and practiced by lão làng academics; not- well- a sophomore English student in an IR institution but ye
next up is that in contains wayyyyyyyy to much repitition on the aforementioned ideas; understandable to the position as an introductory book; not that comprehensible on the dimension of food 4 thoughts (the section on Rorty's central thoughts in the chapter 14, specifically his concept of social commendation; contingency irony and so on); but if i'm being fair the repeated part does try to connect with the sectional content by adaptation;
last is the final chapter in the book on cultural politics and cultural policy; this is just personal opinion but i just dreaded the chapter because it lacks the conciseness and clarity in dealing with the problem of theories and its application; but subjectively speaking; it has to entail ALL relevant subjects so these are probably inevitable; but the ironic parts is that the author did not seem too happy to include that into the book as well lmao so im content. Ah and lets not forget the author mentioned homosexual practices which i found weird and slightly offensive.
Overall, with the amount of knowledge I'm having, i chose to give this a 4-star not the intended 3-star for its comprehensiveness and the journey i have had with it. I have had my funs and also dreads while reading it; esp the final chapters oh how i hate public policy. But i still think i have learnt from this book a lot. So looking forward to the revised edition of this review after a few other books.
Bai bai.
5/12/2020 12:06 am
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Thank God I read this book (not wholly tho) in the form of -kind of- simplified presentations, otherwise my tiny brain would have lost every cell. It really is an amazing book, unless you have to memorize half of it for an exam. Do I understand it? Mostly yes. Do I like what I've read? Hell yes. Can I memorize it in a uni-acceptable way? HELL NO.
Update: I actually got 9/10 on my exam so maybe my brain is not that tiny after all, GO CULTURAL STUDIES!!!
there's a certain limit between comprehensive and excessively detailed. Chris barker seems to aim for the latter and ended up being the former.
this book is filled with so many details, it's easy to lose a train of thought when you're reading it like a textbook. from my perspective, this myriad of details is a good thing, since every textbook lovers would always need to know the inner working of things. just don't get your train lost in the shadows.
i think this book is a must read for n00Bs trying to get their head on the cultural studies subject. just remember, it's prettymuch a postmodernist's book... you may not be well equipped to survive...
Started reading it and I think it's a great reference to those who are interested in cultural studies ! But to be honest It confused me in some parts especially the theoretical way of studying cultural studies part !
buku pegangan wajib bagi mereka yg sedang memperdalam ranah kajian, termasuk anak sastra. mengupas tuntas berbagai teori.modern dengan bahasa terjemahan yg mudah dimengerti.
After spending a few sleepless nights thinking you will fail all your exams because you have no idea what is going on (who the hell is this Foucault guy anyway), it does in fact become easier and surprisingly quite interesting.