Cultural Methodologies illustrates the distinctiveness and coherence of cultural studies as a site of interaction between the humanities and the social sciences.
Topics covered include: the relationship between critical theory and cultural studies; the pragmatics of cultural research and education; ethical questions and research purposes; the role of feminism in cultural studies; the uses of autobiography; the analysis of city cultures; textual analysis and ethnographic procedures; constructions of identity in relation to `race', sexuality and nationhood; the use of qualitative and quantitative data; and some of the main issues involved in generating research findings for a thesis or other publication.
The book is written for students either commencing or intending to do research in cultural studies. It stresses how necessary it is to consider and plan very carefully the rationales and principles in research while avoiding the straitjacket of `methodolatory'.
Author(s): Jim McGuigan (ed.)
Publisher: SAGE
Year: 1997
Language: English
Pages: 226
Part I: Methodologies
Chapter 1: Critical Theory and Cultural Studies: The Missed Articulation
Chapter 2: Towards a Pragmatics for Cultural Studies
Chapter 3: Media, Ethics and Morality
Chapter 4: Learning from Experience: Cultural Studies and Feminism
Part II: Researches
Chapter 5: Writing the Self: The End of the Scholarship Girl
Chapter 6: Relocating Location: Cultural Geography, the Specificity of Place and the City Habitus
Chapter 7: Dancing: Representation and Difference
Chapter 8: Irish Cultural Studies and the Politics of Irish Studies
Part III: Reflections
Chapter 9: Thin Descriptions: Questions of Method in Cultural Analysis
Chapter 10: Working Practices