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Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices (Culture, Media and Identities Series)BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
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Usually ships in 24 hours RRP: Buy New: $46.75 You Save: $5.20 (10%) Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours EDITORIAL REVIEWRepresentationùthe production of meaning through language, discourse, and imageùoccupies a central place in current studies on culture. This broad-ranging text offers a comprehensive outline of how visual images, language, and discourse work as "systems of representation." The chapters explain a variety of approaches to representation, bringing to bear concepts from semiotic, discursive, psychoanalytic, anthropological, sociological, feminist, art-historical, and Foucauldian models of representation. The editors explore representation as a signifying practice in a rich diversity of social contexts and institutional sites, including the use of photography in the construction of national identity and culture; the poetics and politics of exhibiting other cultures in ethnographic museums; fantasies of the racialized other in popular media, film, and image; the construction of masculine identities in discourses of consumer culture and advertising; and the gendering of narratives in television soap operas. Representation analyzes contested and critical questions of meaning, truth, knowledge, and power in representation, and the relations between representation, pleasure, and fantasy. Accessible but not simplified, the book offers a unique perspective for teachers and students in cultural studies and related fields PRODUCT DETAILSPublisher: Sage Publications & Open UniversityPub. Date: 1st April 1997 Catalog: Book Media: Paperback Number Of Pages: 400 Ean: 9780761954323 Isbn: 0761954325 ABOUT THIS BOOKUSER REVIEWS
Hall is tendentious, unscientific, and very, very "academic" in what that term had come to mean by the late 20th century. Sort of dated. good like monach or cliff review notes;not much thinking involved; not much that is not terribly old, cliched.
I read this text for an intro class to Cultural Studies, and I really enjoyed it. Hall discusses the issues of race, gender, and class in our society in many interpretations within this text. He shows how all these three are interconnected, and does so in a fascinating way. The question of how did we become the way we are in society is addressed in various ways through different representations: the media, culture, and ourselves. A lot of historical aspects is presented in this text to give the reader more of an answer to the previous question. This text is great for someone who is into cultural studies, or anyone who is interested in just learning more about themselves and making sense of the society around them. SIMILAR ITEMS: |

good for beginners
learning about yourself and others