This much-needed update of American Cultural Studies provides an introduction to the central themes in modern American culture and exploring how these themes can be interpreted.
Neil Campbell and Alasdair Kean discuss the various aspects of American cultural life such as religion, gender and sexuality and regionalism. Updates and revisions include:
a new introduction engaging with current debates in the field an all-new chapter on foreign policy thorough discussion of globalization and Americanization new case studies updated list of further reading. A refreshing and contemporary update of a staple text on American Studies reading lists.
I found this book very helpful—as a reference text. Campbell and Kean have obviously read widely, and this allows them to assimilate a vast amount of theory and media that they use to produce a composite of what can loosely be called American representations of itself, to itself, and to others.
As a text to read, don't expect to be swept away by a narrative or entranced by detailed examples. Campbell and Kean favor a meticulous example-laden approach organized around principles of what American culture 'is' or, for their purposes, can be taken to be. These include regionalism, religion, global reach, cities, and so on. In each chapter, the authors provide a summary of how these areas of study are being considered (or reconsidered) in contemporary research, then attempt to offer specific examples that highlight these theoretical insights.
Attempting to synthesize the vast agglomeration of American cultural artefacts sometimes overwhelms Campbell and Kean and can lead to banal conclusions. But you probably didn't come here for pathbreaking analysis. Rather, the book is better taken as a survey of just how varied American cultural representations have been, how contradictory they can be.
Another way of saying this is that the book's value is expressed in its title: it is an introduction. It strongly favors comprehensiveness and summary descriptions over depth and explanation. For one interested in American cultural studies, the book provides the reader with a valuable launching off point for areas of further, deeper inquiry (just follow their citations). But don't come in expecting to find that deep inquiry here.