From Class Struggle to the Politics of Pleasure: Effects of Gramscianism on Cultural Studies Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

From Class Struggle to the Politics of Pleasure: Effects of Gramscianism on Cultural Studies Book

From Class Struggle to the Politics of Pleasure artises from reading and teaching Gramscian work in cultural studies, education, media studies, leisure and politics over the last twenty years. It argues that Gramscian work is undoubtedly powerful and persuasive. Indeed by the 1990s one can almost say that it has become the governing orthodoxy. Harris reads the work critically and in detail, tracing arguments across time and across different specialisms, assessing them, and trying to examine how they deal with critics and with new challenging topics. He maintans that cultural studies contains many absences, silences and closures, and that it deploys a number of narrative techniques to remain credible. Wide-ranging and critical, From Class Struggle to the Politics of Pleasure provides an ideal critical assessment of one of the most fashionable and powerful intellectual traditions in contemporary social science. This book will help students to critically read Gramscian work and decide where its strengths and weaknesses lie for themselves, and make them less dependent on the Gramscians' own accounts and agendas.Read More

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  • 0415062241
  • 9780415062244
  • David Harris
  • 29 October 1992
  • Routledge
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 240
  • 1
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