Beyond celebration a call for rethinking cultural studies /
Abstract (Summary)
Dr. Ellen Berry, Advisor
This is a polemical dissertation which seeks to serve as an intervention into the theoretical
debates and tensions within cultural studies. These debates, which have taken place over the last
few decades, have centered on the populist bent within cultural studies, the turn away from the
concerns of political economy, and the influence of French theories that emphasize signification,
play, and relativism. At stake in these debates is our way of understanding the world and
imagining it differently. I argue that the celebratory direction found in much of the work by
cultural studies scholars in which resistance, subversion and transgression are located in all
things popular has led to an expressivist politics which lacks explanatory power and is
symptomatic of a loss of political will. This dissertation critiques three particular directions that
exemplify the celebratory turn: claims regarding transgression; claims regarding audience
activity; and celebratory accounts of consumption. Chapter one provides an exposition of the
debates that have plagued cultural studies, laying the ground for later arguments. Chapter two
provides an introduction to reality television which is enlisted as a cultural symptom through
which to interrogate weaknesses in theoretical positions (in chapters three through five) adopted
by cultural studies scholars and strengths in alternative theoretical legacies. Chapter three turns
toward the concept of transgression, arguing the romantic view of transgression as subversion
relies on a partial reading of the work of figures such as Bakhtin. Chapter four focuses upon a
critique of the limitations of conceptions of the active audience, arguing that the political
economy of the Frankfurt School theorists can serve as a corrective to perspectives that divorce
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production from consumption. Chapter five then examines the promotion of consumption as
resistance, construing individual self-fashioning as a politics. Such an expressivist politics
ignores broad structural change in favor of changing the self. Finally, I conclude that there has
been a failure of imagination within cultural studies scholarship. I propose that a return to
devalued theoretical legacies, such as the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School, can provide a
vantage point for rethinking cultural studies.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Bowling Green State University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:culture popular united states
ISBN:
Date of Publication: