The Structure of Modern Cultural Theory

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This book is about the claims of Cultural Theory as a particular kind of intellectual ethos or discipline. The book argues that Cultural Theory is best seen, at least in its 'modern' form, as an ethical discipline. As such, it should be seen as a form of inquiry governed by the guiding idea of the cultivation of critical autonomy and, as such, is designed as much to change what we are in our relations to ourselves as to describe the world as it is in particular 'positive' ways. The content of the book develops this argument through critical readings of three canonical writers, namely Theodor Adorno, Michel Foucault and Pierre Bourdieu. A final chapter contrasts the ethical idea of modern Cultural Theory developed here with its postmodern derivations, which, it is argued, have taken both a more positivist and even more moralistic form.

Author(s): Thomas Osborne
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Year: 2008

Language: English
Pages: 168
City: Manchester and New York
Tags: Adorno Theodor W 1903 1969 Foucault Michel 1926 1984 Bourdieu Pierre 1930 2002 Culture Critical theory POLITICAL SCIENCE Public Policy Cultural SOCIAL Anthropology Popular Culturele aspecten Cultuursociologie Modernisme cultuur

Preface and acknowledgements viii
Introduction 1
1 Culture – an antinomical view 14
2 Adorno as educator 35
3 Foucault and the ethics of subjectivity 67
4 Bourdieu, ethics and reflexivity 103
5 A note on postmodern cultural theory 140
Conclusion 154
Index 165