Introduction: Cultural Studies 50 Years on, Kieran Connell and Matthew Hilton / Part I: Situating the Centre / 1. The Lost World of Cultural Studies: An Intellectual History, Dennis Dworkin / 2. Conjuncture and the Politics of Knowledge – CCCS, 1968-1984, Geoff Eley / 3. Cultural Studies at Birmingham 1985-2002 – The Last Decade, Ann Gray / 4. Cultural Studies on the Margins: the CCCS in Birmingham and Beyond, Kieran Connell and Matthew Hilton / Part II: Pedagogy and Practices / 5. 'Reading for tone'; Searching for Method and Meaning , Ros Brunt / 6. Hierarchies and Beyond? Staff, Students and the Making of Cultural Studies in Birmingham, John Clarke / 7. Theory, Politics and Practice: Then and Now, Tony Jefferson / 8. Seeking Interdisciplinarity: The Promise and Premise of Cultural Studies, Larry Grossberg / Part III: Politics / 9. The Centre’s Marxism(s): ‘A little Modest Work of Reconstruction’?, Gregor McLennan / 10. CCCS and the Disturbance that was Feminism, Maureen McNeil / 11. Feminism and Cultural Studies: 50 Years On, Jackie Stacey / 12. CCCS – a Political Legacy?, Richard Johnson / Part IV: Trajectories and Boundaries / 13. Disciplinary Crimes Under the Volcano, Iain Chambers and Lidia Curti / 14. “To Tell a Better Story”: The Curious Incidence of Conjunctural Analysis, Mikko Lehtonen / 15. Cultural Studies Untamed and Re-imagined, Keyan Tomaselli /16. Entering into the Expressway of Cultural Studies: Practices in China’, Huang Zhuo-yue/ Part V: Dialogues and Practices / 17. Action Not Words: Neighbourhood Activism and Cultural Studies , Chas Critcher / 18. Cultural Studies and Channel 4 Television: A Moment of Conjuncture, Dorothy Hobson / 19. Cultural Studies Conquered the Midwest and Took me to London Fashion History, Becky Conekin / 20. On Not Being at CCCS, Jo Littler / Part VI: Interview with Stuart Hall / 21. Stuart Hall interviewed by Kieran Connell / Index
Kieran Connell is a Lecturer in Contemporary British History at
Queen’s University Belfast. He has published on subjects including
race, immigration, photography and the New Left in post-war Britain
and has co-curated exhibitions on the Centre for Contemporary
Cultural Studies and the photographs of Janet Mendelsohn.
Previously he worked at the Open University and the University of
Birmingham.
Matthew Hilton is Professor of Social History at the University of
Birmingham. He is the author of several books including Smoking in
British Popular Culture (Manchester, 2000), Prosperity for All:
Consumer Activism in an Era of Globalisation (Cornell, 2009) and
The Politics of Expertise: How NGOs Shaped Modern Britain (Oxford,
2013). He is an editor of Past and Present and is currently
researching the history of humanitarianism and international aid
and development.
In this thoughtful and wide-ranging collection, Kieran Connell and
Matthew Hilton have brought together leading practitioners and
first-rate scholars in the field of cultural studies to reflect on
and chart the important histories, legacies, practices, and
politics of the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
and with it the whole radical intellectual project of cultural
studies. The outcome is a vital, illuminating, and robust
intervention that no scholar or student interested in the past,
present, and future of cultural studies can afford to
ignore!
*Jaafar Aksikas, Cultural Studies Program, Columbia College
Chicago; President of the Cultural Studies Association (2014-2016);
and Editor of Cultural Studies and Marxism.*
If you care about the history of cultural studies, then you need
this book.
If you care about the current state of cultural studies, then you
need this book.
If you care about the future of cultural studies, then you need
this book.
*Gilbert B. Rodman, Associate Professor of Communication Studies,
University of Minnesota*
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