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Zusatztext 'A critical! meticulous and coherent account of Raymond Williams's principal ideas and intellectual development! Paul Jones provides a scholarly overview of Williams's immanent emancipatory theory. In charting the growth of Williams's sociology of culture! this volume explores the complex and conflictual relations between sociology! cultural studies and literary theory. The Raymond Williams book for which we have all been waiting.' - Bryan Turner! University of Cambridge! UK 'One of the most important examinations of Williams's work to date. Skilful summary exposition and explanation of Williams's positions(s) are valuably supplemented by a depth of theoretical knowledge that seeks throughout to place Williams's work in a broader context. Exploring as it does interactions and borrowings between sociology! semiology! literary history! Marxist theories! Frankfurt School critical theory and (post)structuralism(s)! the book would make a fine contribution to graduate-level courses that address the emergence and complexities of critical-cultural analysis throughout the past 50 years or more.' - James Hamilton! University of Georgia! USA! in Media! Culture and Society Informationen zum Autor PAUL JONES is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of New South Wales, Australia. Klappentext This detailed study of Williams unlocks his late sociology of culture. It covers previously overlooked aspects! such as his critique of Birmingham cultural studies! his use of an Adorno-like approach to 'cultural production'! his 'social formalist' alternative to structuralism and post-structuralism and his approach to 'the media'. Zusammenfassung This detailed study of Williams unlocks his late sociology of culture. It covers previously overlooked aspects! such as his critique of Birmingham cultural studies! his use of an Adorno-like approach to 'cultural production'! his 'social formalist' alternative to structuralism and post-structuralism and his approach to 'the media'. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Tables and Figures Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Settling Accounts with 'Culture' Cultural Materialism Versus 'Received Marxism' From Criticism to Critique Social Formalism Towards a New Sociology of Culture Cultural Production and Means of Communication The Long Revolutions of Modernity Bibliography Index...
List of contents
List of Tables and Figures Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Settling Accounts with 'Culture' Cultural Materialism Versus 'Received Marxism' From Criticism to Critique Social Formalism Towards a New Sociology of Culture Cultural Production and Means of Communication The Long Revolutions of Modernity Bibliography Index
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'A critical, meticulous and coherent account of Raymond Williams's principal ideas and intellectual development, Paul Jones provides a scholarly overview of Williams's immanent emancipatory theory. In charting the growth of Williams's sociology of culture, this volume explores the complex and conflictual relations between sociology, cultural studies and literary theory. The Raymond Williams book for which we have all been waiting.' - Bryan Turner, University of Cambridge, UK
'One of the most important examinations of Williams's work to date. Skilful summary exposition and explanation of Williams's positions(s) are valuably supplemented by a depth of theoretical knowledge that seeks throughout to place Williams's work in a broader context. Exploring as it does interactions and borrowings between sociology, semiology, literary history, Marxist theories, Frankfurt School critical theory and (post)structuralism(s), the book would make a fine contribution to graduate-level courses that address the emergence and complexities of critical-cultural analysis throughout the past 50 years or more.' - James Hamilton, University of Georgia, USA, in Media, Culture and Society