CULTURAL STUDIES, MULTICULTURALISM, AND MEDIA CULTURE
By Douglas Kellner
Radio,
television, film, and the other products of media culture provide materials out
of which we forge our very identities; our sense of selfhood; our notion of
what it means to be male or female; our sense of class, of ethnicity and race,
of nationality, of sexuality; and of "us" and "them." Media
images help shape our view of the world and our deepest values: what we
consider good or bad, positive or negative, moral or evil. Media stories
provide the symbols, myths, and resources through which we constitute a common
culture and through the appropriation of which we insert ourselves into this
culture. Media spectacles demonstrate who has power and who is powerless, who
is allowed to exercise force and violence, and who is not. They dramatize and
legitimate the power of the forces that be and show the powerless that they
must stay in their places or be oppressed.
We
are immersed from cradle to grave in a media and consumer society and thus it
is important to learn how to understand, interpret, and criticize its meanings
and messages. The media are a profound and often misperceived source of
cultural pedagogy: They contribute to educating us how to behave and what to
think, feel, believe, fear, and desire -- and what not to. The media are forms
of pedagogy which teach us how to be men and women. They show us how to dress,
look and consume; how to react to members of different social groups; how to be
popular and successful and how to avoid failure; and how to conform to the
dominant system of norms, values, practices, and institutions. Consequently,
the gaining of critical media literacy is an important resource for individuals
and citizens in learning how to cope with a seductive cultural environment.
Learning how to read, criticize, and resist socio-cultural manipulation can
help empower oneself in relation to dominant forms of media and culture. It can
enhance individual sovereignty vis-a-vis media culture and give people more
power over their cultural environment.
In
this essay, I will discuss the potential contributions of a cultural studies
perspective to media critique and literacy. In recent years, cultural
studies has emerged as a set of approaches to the study of culture and
society. The project was inaugurated by the University of Birmingham Centre for
Contemporary Cultural Studies which developed a variety of critical methods for
the analysis, interpretation, and criticism of cultural artifacts.[1]
Through a set of internal debates, and responding to social struggles and
movements of the 1960s and the 1970s, the Birmingham group came to focus on the
interplay of representations and ideologies of class, gender, race, ethnicity,
and nationality in cultural texts, including media culture. They were among the
first to study the effects of newspapers, radio, television, film, and other
popular cultural forms on audiences. They also focused on how various audiences
interpreted and used media culture differently, analyzing the factors that made
different audiences respond in contrasting ways to various media texts.
Through
studies of youth subcultures, British cultural studies demonstrated how culture
came to constitute distinct forms of identity and group membership. For
cultural studies, media culture provides the materials for constructing views
of the world, behavior, and even identities. Those who uncritically follow the
dictates of media culture tend to "mainstream" themselves, conforming
to the dominant fashion, values, and behavior. Yet cultural studies is also
interested in how subcultural groups and individuals resist dominant forms of
culture and identity, creating their own style and identities. Those who obey
ruling dress and fashion codes, behavior, and political ideologies thus produce
their identities within mainstream group, as members of specific social
groupings (such as white, middle-class conservative Americans). Persons who
identify with subcultures, like punk culture, or black nationalist subcultures,
look and act differently from those in the mainstream, and thus create
oppositional identities, defining themselves against standard models.
Cultural studies insists that culture
must be studied within the social relations and system through which culture is
produced and consumed, and that thus study of culture is intimately bound up
with the study of society, politics, and economics. Cultural studies shows how
media culture articulates the dominant values, political ideologies, and social
developments and novelties of the era. It conceives of U.S. culture and society
as a contested terrain with various groups and ideologies struggling for
dominance (Kellner 1995). Television, film, music, and other popular cultural
forms are thus often liberal or conservative, or occasionally express more
radical or oppositional views.
Cultural
studies is valuable because it provides some tools that enable one to read and
interpret one's culture critically. It also subverts distinctions between
"high" and "low" culture by considering a wide continuum of
cultural artifacts ranging from novels to television and by refusing to erect
any specific cultural hierarchies or canons. Previous approaches to culture tended
to be primarily literary and elitist, dismissing media culture as banal,
trashy, and not worthy of serious attention. The project of cultural studies,
by contrast, avoids cutting the field of culture into high and low, or popular
against elite. Such distinctions are difficult to maintain and generally serve
as a front for normative aesthetic valuations and, often, a political program
(i.e. either dismissing mass culture for high culture, or celebrating what is
deemed "popular" while scorning "elitist" high culture).
Cultural
studies allows us to examine and critically scrutinize the whole range of
culture without prior prejudices toward one or another sort of cultural text,
institution, or practice. It also opens the way toward more differentiated political,
rather than aesthetic, valuations of cultural artifacts in which one attempts
to distinguish critical and oppositional from conformist and conservative
moments in a cultural artifact. For instance, studies of Hollywood film show
how key 1960s films promoted the views of radicals and the counterculture and
how film in the 1970s was a battleground between liberal and conservative
positions; late 1970s films, however, tended toward conservative positions that
helped elect Ronald Reagan as president (See Kellner and Ryan, 1988).
There
is an intrinsically critical and political dimension to the project of cultural
studies which distinguishes it from objectivist and apolitical academic
approaches to the study of culture and society. British cultural studies, for
example, analyzed culture historically in the context of its societal origins
and effects. It situated culture within a theory of social production and
reproduction, specifying the ways that cultural forms served either to further
social domination or to enable people to resist and struggle against
domination. It analyzed society as a hierarchical and antagonistic set of
social relations characterized by the oppression of subordinate class, gender,
race, ethnic, and national strata. Employing Gramsci's model of hegemony and
counterhegemony, it sought to analyze "hegemonic," or ruling, social
and cultural forces of domination and to seek "counterhegemonic"
forces of resistance and struggle. The project was aimed at social transformation
and attempted to specify forces of domination and resistance in order to aid
the process of political struggle and emancipation from oppression and
domination.
For
cultural studies, the concept of ideology is of central importance, for
dominant ideologies serve to reproduce social relations of domination and
subordination.[2] Ideologies
of class, for instance, celebrate upper class life and denigrate the working
class. Ideologies of gender promote sexist representations of women and
ideologies of race utilize racist representations of people of color and
various minority groups. Ideologies make inequalities and subordination appear
natural and just, and thus induce consent to relations of domination.
Contemporary societies are structured by opposing groups who have different
political ideologies (liberal, conservative, radical, etc.) and cultural
studies specifies what, if any, ideologies are operative in a given cultural
artifact (which could involved, of course, the specification of ideological
contradictions). In the course of this study, I will provide some examples of
how different ideologies are operative in media cultural texts and will
accordingly provide examples of ideological analysis and critique.
Because of its focus on representations of race, gender, and class, and its critique of ideologies that promote various forms of oppression, cultural studies lends itself to a multiculturalist program that demonstrates how culture reproduces certain forms of racism, sexism, and biases against members of subordinate classes, social groups, or alternative life-styles. Multiculturalism affirms the worth of different types of culture and cultural groups, claiming, for instance, that black, Latino, Asian, Native American, gay, and lesbian, and other oppressed and marginal voices have their own validity and importance. An insurgent multiculturalism attempts to show how various people's voices and experiences are silenced and omitted from mainstream culture and struggles to aid in the articulation of diverse views, experiences, and cultural forms, from groups excluded from the mainstream. This makes it a target of conservative forces who wish to preserve the existing canons of white male, Euro-centric privilege and thus attack multiculturalism in cultural wars raging from the 1960s to the present over education, the arts, and the limits of free expression.
Cultural
studies thus promotes a multiculturalist politics and media pedagogy that aims
to make people sensitive to how relations of power and domination are
"encoded" in cultural texts, such as those of television or film. But
it also specifies how people can resist the dominant encoded meanings and
produce their own critical and alternative readings. Cultural studies can show
how media culture manipulates and indoctrinates us, and thus can empower
individuals to resist the dominant meanings in media cultural products and to
produce their own meanings. It can also point to moments of resistance and
criticism within media culture and thus help promote development of more critical
consciousness.
A
critical cultural studies -- embodied in many of the articles collected in this
reader -- thus develops concepts and analyses that will enable readers to
analytically dissect the artifacts of contemporary media culture and to gain
power over their cultural environment. By exposing the entire field of culture
to knowledgeable scrutiny, cultural studies provides a broad, comprehensive
framework to undertake studies of culture, politics, and society for the
purposes of individual empowerment and social and political struggle and
transformation. In the following pages, I will therefore indicate some of the
chief components of the type of cultural studies that I find most useful.
Components of a Critical Cultural Studies
At
its strongest, cultural studies contains a three-fold project of analyzing the
production and political economy of culture, cultural texts, and the audience
reception of those texts and their effects. This comprehensive approach avoids
too narrowly focusing on one dimension of the project to the exclusion of
others. To avoid such limitations, I would thus propose a multi-perspectival
approach that (a) discusses production and political economy, (b) engages in
textual analysis, and (c) studies the reception and use of cultural texts.[3]
Production
and Political Economy
Because
it has been neglected in many modes of recent cultural studies, it is important
to stress the importance of analyzing cultural texts within their system of
production and distribution, often referred to as the political economy
of culture.[4]
Inserting texts into the system of culture within which they are produced and
distributed can help elucidate features and effects of the texts that textual
analysis alone might miss or downplay. Rather than being antithetical
approaches to culture, political economy can actually contribute to textual
analysis and critique. The system of production often determines what sort of
artifacts will be produced, what structural limits there will be as to what can
and cannot be said and shown, and what sort of audience effects the text may
generate.
Study
of the codes of television, film, or popular music, for instance, is enhanced
by studying the formulas and conventions of production. These cultural forms
are structured by well-defined rules and conventions, and the study of the
production of culture can help elucidate the codes actually in play. Because of
the demands of the format of radio or music television, for instance, most
popular songs are three to five minutes, fitting into the format of the
distribution system. Because of their control by giant corporations oriented
primarily toward profit, film and television production in the U.S. is
dominated by specific genres such as talk and game shows, soap operas,
situation comedies, action/adventure series, reality TV, and so on. This
economic factor explains why there are cycles of certain genres and subgenres,
sequelmania in the film industry, crossovers of popular films into television
series, and a certain homogeneity in products constituted within systems of
production marked by rigid generic codes, formulaic conventions, and
well-defined ideological boundaries.
Likewise,
study of political economy can help determine the limits and range of political
and ideological discourses and effects. My study of television in the United
States, for instance, disclosed that takeover of the television networks by
major transnational corporations and communications conglomerates was part of a
"right turn" within U.S. society in the 1980s whereby powerful
corporate groups won control of the state and the mainstream media (Kellner,
1990). For example, during the 1980s all three networks were taken over by
major corporate conglomerates: ABC was taken over in 1985 by Capital Cities,
NBC was taken over by GE, and CBS was taken over by the Tisch Financial Group.
Both ABC and NBC sought corporate mergers and this motivation, along with other
benefits derived from Reaganism, might well have influenced them to downplay
criticisms of Reagan and to generally support his conservative programs,
military adventures, and simulated presidency.
Corporate
conglomeratization has intensified further and today AOL and Time Warner,
Disney, and other global media conglomerates control ever more domains of the
production and distribution of culture (McChesney 2000). In this global
context, one cannot really analyze the role of the media in the Gulf war, for
instance, without analyzing the production and political economy of news and
information, as well as the actual text of the Gulf war and its reception by
its audience (see Kellner, 1992). Likewise, the ownership by conservative
corporations of dominant media corporations helps explain mainstream media
support of the Bush administration and their policies, such as the war in
Afghanistan (Kellner 2001).
Looking toward entertainment, one
cannot fully grasp the Madonna phenomenon without analyzing her marketing
strategies, her political environment, her cultural artifacts, and their
effects (Kellner, 1995). In a similar fashion, younger female pop music stars
and groups such as Mariah Carey, Britney Spears, Jennifer Lopez, or N¹Sync also
deploy the tools of the glamour industry and media spectacle to make certain
stars icons of fashion, beauty, style, and sexuality, as well as purveyors of
music. And in appraising the full social impact of pornography, one needs to be
aware of the sex industry and the production process of, say, pornographic
films, and not just dwell on the texts themselves and their effects on
audiences.
Furthremore, in an era of
globalization, one must be aware of the global networks that produce and
distribute cultural in the interests of profit and corporate hegemony. Yet
political economy alone does not hold the key to cultural studies and important
as it is, it has limitations as a single approach. Some political economy
analyses reduce the meanings and effects of texts to rather circumscribed and
reductive ideological functions, arguing that media culture merely reflects the
ideology of the ruling economic elite that controls the culture industries and
is nothing more than a vehicle for capitalist ideology. It is true that media
culture overwhelmingly supports capitalist values, but it is also a site of
intense struggle between different races, classes, gender, and social groups.
Thus, in order to fully grasp the nature and effects of media culture, one
needs to develop methods to analyze the full range of its meanings and effects.
Textual
Analysis
The
products of media culture require multidimensional close textual readings to
analyze their various forms of discourses, ideological positions, narrative
strategies, image construction, and effects. There have been a wide range of
types of textual criticism of media culture, ranging from quantitative content
analysis that dissects the number of, say, episodes of violence in a text, to
qualitative study that examines images of women, blacks, or other groups, or
that applies various critical theories to unpack the meanings of the texts or
to explicate how texts function to produce meaning. Traditionally, the
qualitative analysis of texts has been the task of formalist literary criticism, which explicates the central
meanings, values, symbols, and ideologies in cultural artifacts by attending to
the formal properties of imaginative literature texts ‹- such as style, verbal
imagery, characterization, narrative structure and point of view, and other
formal elements of the artifact. From the 1960s on, however, literary-formalist
textual analysis has been enhanced by methods derived from semiotics, a system for investigating the creation of
meaning not only in written languages but also in other, nonverbal codes, such
as the visual and auditory languages of film and TV.
Semiotics
analyzes how linguistic and nonlinguistic cultural ³signs² form systems of
meanings, as when giving someone a rose is interpreted as a sign of love, or
getting an A on a college paper is a sign of mastery of the rules of the
specific assignment. Semiotic analysis can be connected with genre criticism
(the study of conventions
governing established types of cultural forms, such as soap operas) to reveal
how the codes and forms of particular genres follow certain meanings. Situation
comedies, for instance, classically follow a conflict/resolution model that
demonstrates how to solve certain social problems by correct actions and
values, and thus provide morality tales of proper and improper behavior. Soap
operas, by contrast, proliferate problems and provide messages concerning the
endurance and suffering needed to get through life¹s endless miseries, while
generating positive and negative models of social behavior. And advertising
shows how commodity solutions solve problems of popularity, acceptance,
success, and the like.
A semiotic and genre analysis of the
film Rambo (1982) for instance, would show how it follows the
conventions of the Hollywood genre of the war film that dramatizes conflicts
between the U.S. and its "enemies" (see Kellner 1995). Semiotics
describes how the images of the villains are constructed according to the codes
of World War II movies and how the resolution of the conflict and happy ending
follows the traditional Hollywood classical cinema which portrays the victory
of good over evil. Semiotic analysis would also include study of the strictly
cinematic and formal elements of a film like Rambo, dissecting the ways
that camera angles present Rambo as a god, or slow motion images of him gliding
through the jungle code him as a force of nature. Semiotic analysis of 2001
film Vanilla Sky could engage how Cameron Crowe¹s film presents a remake
of a 1997 Spanish film, and how the use of celebrity stars Tom Cruise and
Penelope Cruz, involved in a real-life romance, provides a spectacle of modern
icons of beauty, desire, sexuality, and power. The science fiction thematic and
images present semiotic depictions of a future in which technoscience can make
everyone beautiful and live out its culture¹s dreams and nightmares.
The textual analysis of cultural
studies thus combines formalist analysis with critique of how cultural meanings
convey specific ideologies of gender, race, class, sexuality, nation, and other
ideological dimensions. Ideological textual analysis should deploy a wide range of methods to fully
explicate each dimension and to show how they fit into textual systems. Each
critical method focuses on certain features of a text from a specific
perspective: the perspective spotlights, or illuminates, some features of a
text while ignoring others. Marxist methods tend to focus on class, for
instance, while feminist approaches will highlight gender, critical race theory
spotlights race and ethnicity, and gay and lesbian theories explicate
sexuality.
Various
critical methods have their own strengths and limitations, their optics and
blindspots. Traditionally, Marxian ideology critiques have been strong on class
and historical contextualization and weak on formal analysis, while some
versions are highly ³reductionist,² reducing textual analysis to denunciation
of ruling class ideology. Feminism excels in gender analysis and in some
versions is formally sophisticated, drawing on such methods as psychoanalysis
and semiotics, although some versions are reductive and early feminism often
limited itself to analysis of images of gender. Psychoanalysis in turn calls for the interpretation of
unconscious contents and meaning, which can articulate latent meanings in a
text, as when Alfred Hitchcock¹s dream sequences project cinematic symbols that
illuminate his characters¹ dilemmas, or when the image of the female character
in Bonnie and Clyde (1967) framed against the bar of her bed suggests
her sexual frustration, imprisonment in middle class family life, and need for
revolt.
Of
course, each reading of a text is only one possible reading from one critic's subject
position, no matter how
multiperspectival, and may or may not be the reading preferred by audiences
(which themselves will be significantly different according to their class,
race, gender, ethnicity, ideologies, and so on). Because there is a split
between textual encoding and audience
decoding, there is always the
possibility of a multiplicity of readings of any text of media culture (Hall,
1980b). There are limits to the openness or polysemic nature of any text, of course, and textual
analysis can explicate the parameters of possible readings and delineate
perspectives that aim at illuminating the text and its cultural and ideological
effects. Such analysis also provides the materials for criticizing misreadings,
or readings that are one-sided and incomplete. Yet to further carry through a
cultural studies analysis, one must also examine how diverse audiences actually
read media texts, and attempt to determine what effects they have on audience
thought and behavior.
All
texts are subject to multiple readings depending on the perspectives and
subject positions of the reader. Members of distinct genders, classes, races,
nations, regions, sexual preferences, and political ideologies are going to
read texts differently, and cultural studies can illuminate why diverse
audiences interpret texts in various, sometimes conflicting, ways. It is indeed
one of the merits of cultural studies to have focused on audience reception in
recent years and this focus provides one of its major contributions, though
there are also some limitations and problems with the standard cultural studies
approaches to the audience.[5]
A
standard way to discover how audiences read texts is to engage in ethnographic
research, in an attempt to
determine how texts effect audiences and shape their beliefs and behavior.
Enthnographic cultural studies have indicated some of the various ways that
audiences use and appropriate texts, often to empower themselves. Radway's
study of women's use of Harlequin novels (1983), for example, shows how these
books provide escapism for women and could be understood as reproducing
traditional women's roles, behavior, and attitudes. Yet, they can also empower women
by promoting fantasies of a different life and may thus inspire revolt against
male domination. Or, they may enforce, in other audiences, female submission to
male domination and trap women in ideologies of romance, in which submission to
Prince Charming is seen as the alpha and omega of happiness for women.
Media culture provides materials for individuals
to create identities and meanings and cultural studies detects uses of cultural
forms. Teenagers use video games and music television as an escape from the
demands of a disciplinary society. Males use sports as a terrain of fantasy
identification, in which they feel empowered as "their" team or star
triumphs. Such sports events also generate a form of community, currently being
lost in the privatized media and consumer culture of our time. Indeed, fandoms
of all sorts, ranging from Star Trek fans ("Trekkies") to
devotees of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, or various soap operas, also form
communities that enable people to relate to others who share their interests
and hobbies. Some fans, in fact, actively recreate their favorite cultural
forms, such as rewriting the scripts of preferred shows, sometimes in the forms
of slash which redefine characters¹ sexuality, or in the forms of music
poaching or remaking such as ³filking² (see examples in Lewis 1992 and Jenkins
1992).
This
emphasis on audience reception and appropriation helps cultural studies
overcome the previous one-sided textualist orientations to culture. It also
directs focus on the actual political effects that texts have and how audiences
use texts. In fact, sometimes audiences subvert the intentions of the producers
or managers of the cultural industries that supply them, as when astute young
media users laugh at obvious attempts to hype certain characters, shows, or
products (see de Certeau, 1984 for more examples of audiences constructing
meaning and engaging in practices in critical and subversive ways). Audience
research can reveal how people are actually using cultural texts and what sort of
effects they are having on everyday life. Combining quantitative and
qualitative research, new reception studies, including some of the essays in
this reader, are providing important contributions into how audiences actually
interact with cultural texts (see the studies in Lewis 1992 and Ang 1996, and
Lee and Cho and xx in this text for further elaboration of decoding and
audience reception).
Yet
there are several problems that I see with reception studies as they have been
constituted within cultural studies, particularly in the U.S. First, there is a
danger that class will be downplayed as a significant variable that structures
audience decoding and use of cultural texts. Cultural studies in England were
particularly sensitive to class differences -- as well as subcultural
differences -- in the use and reception of cultural texts, but I have noted
many dissertations, books, and articles in cultural studies in the U.S. where
attention to class has been downplayed or is missing altogether. This is not surprising
as a neglect of class as a constitutive feature of culture and society is an
endemic deficiency in the American academy in most disciplines.
There
is also the reverse danger, however, of exaggerating the constitutive force of
class, and downplaying, or ignoring, such other variables as gender or
ethnicity. Staiger (1992) notes that Fiske, building on Hartley, lists seven
"subjectivity positions" that are important in cultural reception,
"self, gender, age-group, family, class, nation, ethnicity," and
proposes adding sexual orientation. All of these factors, and no doubt more,
interact in shaping how audiences receive and use texts and must be taken into
account in studying cultural reception, for audiences decode and use texts
according to the specific constituents of their class, race or ethnicity,
gender, sexual preferences and so on.
Furthermore,
I would warn against a tendency to romanticize the ³active audience,² by
claiming that all audiences produce their own meanings and denying that media
culture may have powerful manipulative effects. There is a tendency within the
cultural studies tradition of reception research to dichotomize between
dominant and oppositional readings (Hall, 1980b, a dichotomy which structures
much of Fiske's work). "Dominant" readings are those in which
audiences appropriate texts in line with the interests of the dominant culture
and the ideological intentions of a text, as when audiences feel pleasure in
the restoration of male power, law and order, and social stability at the end
of a film like Die Hard, after the hero and representatives of authority
eliminate the terrorists who had taken over a high-rise corporate headquarters.
An "oppositional" reading, by contrast, celebrates the resistance to
this reading in audience appropriation of a text; for example, Fiske (1993)
observes resistance to dominant readings when homeless individuals in a shelter
cheered the destruction of police and authority figures, during repeated
viewings of a video-tape of Die Hard.
Although
this can be a useful distinction, there is a tendency in cultural studies to
celebrate resistance per se without distinguishing between types and forms of
resistance (a similar problem resides with indiscriminate celebration of
audience pleasure in certain reception studies). For example, resistance to
social authority by the homeless evidenced in their viewing of Die Hard
could serve to strengthen brutal masculist behavior and encourage
manifestations of physical violence to solve social problems. Jean-Paul Sartre,
Frantz Fanon, and Herbert Marcuse, among others, have argued that violence can
be either emancipatory, when directed at forces of oppression, or reactionary,
when directed at popular forces struggling against oppression. Many feminists,
by contrast, or those in the Gandhian tradition, see all violence as forms of
brute masculist behavior and many people see it as a problematical form of
conflict resolution. Resistance and pleasure cannot therefore be valorized per
se as progressive elements of the appropriation of cultural texts, but
difficult discriminations must be made as to whether the resistance,
oppositional reading, or pleasure in a given experience is progressive or
reactionary, emancipatory or destructive.
Thus,
while emphasis on the audience and reception was an excellent correction to the
one-sidedness of purely textual analysis, I believe that in recent years
cultural studies has overemphasized reception and textual analysis, while
underemphasizing the production of culture and its political economy. This type
of cultural studies fetishizes audience reception studies and neglects both
production and textual analysis, thus producing populist celebrations of the
text and audience pleasure in its use of cultural artifacts. This approach,
taken to an extreme, would lose its critical perspective and would lead to a
positive gloss on audience experience of whatever is being studied. Such
studies also might lose sight of the manipulative and conservative effects of
certain types of media culture and thus serve the interests of the cultural
industries as they are presently constituted.
A
new way, in fact, to research media effects is to use the data bases which
collect media texts such as Dialogue or Nexis/Lexis and to trace the effects of
media artifacts like The X-Files, Buffy, the Vampire Slayer, or
advertising corporations like Nike and McDonalds, through analysis of
references to them in the media. Likewise, there is a new terrain of Internet
audience research which studies how fans act in chat rooms devoted to their
favorite artifacts of media culture, create their own fansites, or construct
artifacts that disclose how they are living out the fantasies and scripts of
the culture industries. Previous studies of the audience and the reception of
media privileged ethnographic studies that selected slices of the vast media
audiences, usually from the site where researchers themselves lived. Such
studies are invariably limited and broader effects research can indicate how
the most popular artifacts of media culture have a wide range of effects. In my
book Media Culture (1995), I studied some examples of popular cultural
artifacts which clearly influenced behavior in audiences throughout the globe.
Examples include groups of kids and adults who imitated Rambo in various forms
of asocial behavior, or fans of Beavis and Butt-Head who started fires
or tortured animals in the modes practiced by the popular MTV cartoon
characters. Media effects are complex and controversial and it is the merit of
cultural studies to make their study an important part of its agenda.
Toward a Cultural Studies that is Critical,
Multicultural, and Multiperspectival
To
avoid the one-sidedness of textual analysis approaches, or audience and
reception studies, I propose that cultural studies itself be multiperspectival,
getting at culture from the perspectives of political economy, text analysis,
and audience reception, as outlined above. Textual analysis should utilize a
multiplicity of perspectives and critical methods, and audience reception
studies should delineate the wide range of subject positions, or perspectives,
through which audiences appropriate culture. This requires a multicultural
approach that sees the importance of analyzing the dimensions of class, race and
ethnicity, and gender and sexual preference within the texts of media culture,
while studying as well their impact on how audiences read and interpret media
culture.
In addition, a critical cultural
studies attacks sexism, racism, or bias against specific social groups (i.e.
gays, intellectuals, and so on), and criticizes texts that promote any kind of
domination or oppression. As an example of how considerations of production,
textual analysis, and audience readings can fruitfully intersect in cultural studies,
let us reflect on the Madonna phenomenon. Madonna first appeared in the moment
of Reaganism and embodied the materialistic and consumer-oriented ethos of the
1980s ("Material Girl"). She also appeared in a time of dramatic
image proliferation, associated with MTV, fashion fever, and intense marketing
of products. Madonna was one of the first MTV music video superstars who
consciously crafted images to attract a mass audience. Her early music videos
were aimed at teen-age girls (the Madonna wanna-be¹s), but she soon
incorporated black, Hispanic, and minority audiences with her images of
interracial sex and multicultural "family" in her concerts. She also
appealed to gay and lesbian audiences, as well as to feminist and academic
audiences, as her videos became more complex and political (i.e. "Like a
Prayer," "Express Yourself," "Vogue," and so on).
Thus,
Madonna's popularity was in large part a function of her marketing strategies
and her production of music videos and images that appealed to diverse
audiences. To conceptualize the meanings and effects in her music, films,
concerts, and public relations stunts requires that her artifacts be
interpreted within the context of their production and reception, which
involves discussion of MTV, the music industry, concerts, marketing, and the
production of images (see Kellner 1995). Understanding Madonna's popularity
also requires focus on audiences, not just as individuals, but as members of
specific groups, such as teen-age girls, who were empowered in their struggles
for individual identity by Madonna, or gays, who were also empowered by her
incorporation of alternative images of sexuality within popular mainstream
cultural artifacts. Yet appraising the politics and effects of Madonna also
requires analysis of how her work might merely reproduce a consumer culture
that defines identity in terms of images and consumption. It would make an
interesting project to examine how former Madonna fans view the evolution and
recent incarnations of the superstar, such as her marriage and 2001 Drowned
World tour, as well as to examine how contemporary fans view Madonna in an age
that embraces younger teen pop singers like Britney Spears or Mariah McCarey.
In short, a cultural studies that is
critical and multicultural provides comprehensive approaches to culture that
can be applied to a wide variety of artifacts from pornography to Madonna, from
MTV to TV news, or to specific events like the 2000 U.S. presidential election
(Kellner 2001), or media representations of the 2001 terrorist attacks on the
U.S. and the U.S. response. Its comprehensive perspectives encompass political
economy, textual analysis, and audience research and provide critical and
political perspectives that enable individuals to dissect the meanings,
messages, and effects of dominant cultural forms. Cultural studies is thus part
of a critical media pedagogy that enables individuals to resist media
manipulation and to increase their freedom and individuality. It can empower
people to gain sovereignty over their culture and to be able to struggle for
alternative cultures and political change. Cultural studies is thus not just
another academic fad, but can be part of a struggle for a better society and a
better life.
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Notes
[1]. For more information on British cultural studies, see Hall 1980b; Johnson 1986/7; Fiske 1986; O'Conner 1989; Turner 1990; Grossberg 1989; Agger 1992; and the articles collected in Grossberg, Nelson, Triechler 1992; During 1992, 1998; and Durham and Kellner 2000. I might note that the Frankfurt School also provided much material for a critical cultural studies in their works on mass culture from the 1930s through the present; on the relation between the Frankfurt School and British cultural studies, see Kellner 1997.
[2]. On the concept of ideology, see Kellner, 1978 and 1979; the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, 1980; Kellner and Ryan, 1988; and Thompson, 1990.
[3]. This model was adumbrated in Hall, 1980a and Johnson, 1986/87 and guided much of the early Birmingham work. Around the mid-1980s, however, the Birmingham group began to increasingly neglect the production and political economy of culture (some believe that this was always a problem with their work) and much of their studies became more academic, cut off from political struggle. I am thus trying to recapture the spirit of the early Birmingham project, reconstructed for our contemporary moment. For a fuller development of my conception of cultural studies, see Kellner, 1992, 1995, and 2001.
[4]. The term "political economy" calls attention to the fact that the production and distribution of culture takes place within a specific economic system, constituted by relations between the state and economy. For instance, in the United States a capitalist economy dictates that cultural production is governed by laws of the market, but the democratic imperatives of the system mean that there is some regulation of culture by the state. There are often tensions within a given society concerning how many activities should be governed by the imperatives of the market, or economics, alone and how much state regulation or intervention is desirable, to assure a wider diversity of broadcast programming, for instance, or the prohibition of phenomena agreed to be harmful, such as cigarette advertising or pornography. (See Kellner, 1990.)