Introduction to the Second Edition
Introduction to the First Edition
1. MAKING SENSE OF THE WALKMAN
Introduction
What is ′Culture′?
Back to the Future: Materiality and Culture
Meanings and Practices
Meaning by Association: Semantic Networks
Back to the Future: Meanings and Associations
Signifying Practices
Contemporary Soundscapes
Back to the Future: Produsage: The Changing Relationship Between
Production and Consumption?
Culture in the Age of Electronic Reproduction
Back to the Future - Benjamin v/2.0
Back to the future: Mobile Privatization?
Walk-men and Walk-women: Subjects and Identities
Back to the Future: Advertizing and Branding
Summary
2. THE PRODUCTION OF THE SONY WALKMAN
Introduction: The Many Origins of an Idea
Cultures of Production, Contexts of Innovation
Heroic Individuals
Back to the Future: Technological Innovation, Heroic Individuals
and Distributed Agency
Sony, Japan and the United States
Sony: Signifying ′Japan′?
Happy Accidents at Work: Enter the Walkman
Making the Walkman to Sell: Connecting Production and
Consumption
Assembling for the Young Consumer: The Mothers of the Invention
Naming the Machine: Sony Grammar
Marketing and Public Relations
Back to the Future: Promotional Culture
Monitoring Consumption and Market Research
Back to the Future: Produsage Revisited
3. DESIGNING THE WALKMAN: ARTICULATING PRODUCTION AND
CONSUMPTION
Designers as Cultural Intermediaries
The Organization of Design at Sony
Lifestyling the Walkman
Back to the Future: The Power of Software: Culture Made
Malleable?
The Walkman: How ′Japanese′ Is It?
4. SONY AS A GLOBAL FIRM
Following the Walkman: Competition and Financial Crisis
Sony Goes Global and Local
Back to the Future: The Global-Local Nexus
Combining Hardware and Software: The Culture Industry
Back to the Future: Synergies and Cultural Industries
5. CONSUMING THE WALKMAN
Introduction
Perspectives on Consumption
Back to the Future: Perspectives on Consumption
Back to the Future: Authenticity
The Production of Consumption
The Walkman and the Production of Consumption Critique
Back to the Future: "Revolutionary" Technologies?
Back to the Future: Optimism and Pessimism in Relation to Web
2.0
Back to the Future: No sense of Place?
Consumption as Socio-cultural Differentiation
Walkman Consumption and Social Differentiation
Consumption as Appropriation and Resistance
6. REGULATING THE WALKMAN
The Walkman and Questions of Cultural Regulation
The Walkman: The Public and the Private
Walkman Use and the Blurring of Boundaries
Back to the Future: Cultural Regulation of Modern Technologies
Summary of Chapters 5 and 6
Selected Readings
Reading A: Bruno Latour: ′Technology is society made durable′
Reading B: Axel Bruns: ′Produsage: Towards a Broader Framework for
User-Led Content Creation′
Reading C: Walter Benjamin: ′The work of art in the age of
mechanical reproduction′
Reading D: Raymond Williams: ′Mobile privatization′
Reading E: Ana Andjelic: ′Time to rewrite the brand playbook for
the digital′
Reading F: Nick Lyons: ′Scratching a global dream′
Reading G: Shu Ueyama: ′The selling of the "Walkman"′
Reading H: Thomas A. Harvey: ′How Sony Corporation became first
with kids′
Reading I: Lev Manovich: ′There is Only software′
Reading J: Jonathan Zittrain: ′The Personal Computer Is Dead′
Reading K: Rey Chow: ′Listening otherwise, music miniaturized: a
different type of question about revolution′
Reading L: Lev Grossman: ′Iran´s protests: Twitter, the Medium of
the Movement′
Reading M: Tim O´Reilly: ′What Is Web 2.0′
Reading N: Mirko Tobias Schäfer: ′Bastard Culture! How User
Participation Transforms Cultural Production′
Reading O: Lain Chambers: ′A miniature history of the Walkman′
Reading P: Vincent Jackson: ′Menace II society′
Paul du Gay is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at The Open
University Stuart Hall was born and raised in Jamaica and arrived
in Britain on a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford in 1950. In 1958, he
left his PhD on Henry James to found the New Left Review, which did
much to open a debate about immigration and the politics of
identity. Along with Raymond Williams and Richard Hoggart he
established the first Cultural Studies programme at a British
university in Birmingham in 1964, bringing the study of popular
culture into the understanding of political and social change.
After spending more than four decades as one of the UK’s leading
public intellectuals, Hall retired from formal academic life in
1997 and since then has continued to devote himself to questions of
representation, creativity and difference. He became the chair of
two foundations, Iniva, the Institute of International Visual Arts,
and Autograph ABP, which seeks to promote photographers from
culturally diverse backgrounds, and championed the opening of
Iniva’s new Rivington Place arts complex in east London in 2007.
Linda Janes is the Course Administrator for PhD Students in
the School of Engineering at the University of Portsmouth. Anders
Koed Madsen is Professor in Humanities at Aalborg University in
Denmark. Dr Hugh Mackay is an Honorary Associate of the
Faculty of Sociology at Open University Keith Negus entered higher
education as a mature student, having spent many years playing
keyboards and guitar in a variety of bands after leaving school. He
gained a degree in Sociology from Middlesex Universit and then
completed a PhD study of the acquisition, production and promotion
of recording artists at SouthBank University. He subsequently
taught at the Universities of Leicester and Puerto Rico and was
based in the Department of Media and Communications prior to moving
the Department of Music at Goldsmiths. He is Director of
the Popular Music Research Unit, convenor of BMus Popular
Music, convenor of the MA Music (Popular Music
Research) and a coordinating editor of Popular
Music (Cambridge University Press).
In today′s world, with economy the central tenet of contemporary
culture and popular culture and finance inextricably linked, this
exemplary Walkman study will be a template and a source of
inspiration for scholars who appreciate the materiality of culture
and continuity between production and consumption.
Barbara Czarniawska
Professor of Management Studies, University of Gothenburg This
publication provides a welcome opportunity to return to a classic
text of cultural studies pedagogy and to apply its insights to
contemporary issues of culture, media and identity and their
connections to the production and consumption of technology. The
combination of the original Walkman case study with useful ′back to
the future′ sections provides a great opportunity for students to
reflect on the cultural meanings of smart phones, social media and
user-generated knowledge.
Dr Richard Elliott
School of Media, Film and Music, University of Sussex
Arguably the most famous book in its field, Doing Cultural Studies:
the Story of the Sony Walkman is the text that lead to Cultural
Studies becoming a respected and accepted discipline throughout the
rest of the world.... Any 21st century observer might object and
ask, somewhat perplexed, "who owns a Walkman nowadays?"... 16 years
after the first edition, the authors can now write in a comparative
fashion between two eras: ‘Comparing the cultural practices
associated with the Walkman with the practices related to modern
Web-based mobile devices reveals both continuities and changes in
the ways such technologies have been represented, identified with,
produced, consumed and regulated, and the way they have been
discussed in the media as well as in academic debates within the
cultural and social sciences’ (p. xii). In theoretical
terms, the legacy of Doing Cultural Studies confirms that this
classic read is not just about the Walkman itself, but represents a
series of clear observations about the symbolic meanings of
culture... This fundamental reading on Cultural Studies should be
read not only by students and scholars in this particular field,
but by students in a variety of domains including sociology of
culture, political economy of culture, popular music studies, media
studies, and marketing. Non-scholars will also be able to follow it
and appreciate its numerous ideas. Most importantly, those who read
this book’s first edition many years ago must read this enriched
second edition as it remains timely and relevant for today, in its
accurate understanding of how we, collectively, identify and
consume culture. The now forgone era of the Walkman serves as a
useful comparison about how some things seem to change or can
remain the same in subtle ways. That is what academic books are
made for.
Read the full review here
*Dr. Yves Laberge, LSE Review of Books*
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