The Uses of Literacy

כריכה קדמית
Transaction Publishers - 320 עמודים

This pioneering work examines changes in the life and values of the English working class in response to mass media. First published in 1957, it mapped out a new methodology in cultural studies based around interdisciplinarity and a concern with how texts-in this case, mass publications-are stitched into the patterns of lived experience. Mixing personal memoir with social history and cultural critique, "The Uses of Literacy "anticipates recent interest in modes of cultural analysis that refuse to hide the author behind the mask of objective social scientific technique. In its method and in its rich accumulation of the detail of working-class life, this volume remains useful and absorbing.

Hoggart's analysis achieves much of its power through a careful delineation of the complexities of working-class attitudes and its sensitivity to the physical and environmental facts of working-class life. The people he portrays are neither the sentimentalized victims of a culture of deference nor neo-fascist hooligans. Hoggart sees beyond habits to what habits stand for and sees through statements to what the statements really mean. He thus detects the differing pressures of emotion behind idiomatic phrases and ritualistic observances.

Through close observation and an emotional empathy deriving, in part, from his own working-class background, Hoggart defines a fairly homogeneous and representative group of working-class people. Against this background may be seen how the various appeals of mass publications and other artifacts of popular culture connect with traditional and commonly accepted attitudes, how they are altering those attitudes, and how they are meeting resistance. Hoggart argues that the appeals made by mass publicists-more insistent, effective, and pervasive than in the past-are moving toward the creation of an undifferentiated mass culture and that the remnants of an authentic urban culture are being destroyed.

In his introduction to this new edition, Andrew Goodwin, professor of broadcast communications arts at San Francisco State University, defines Hoggart's place among contending schools of English cultural criticism and points out the prescience of his analysis for developments in England over the past thirty years. He notes as well the fruitful links to be made between Hoggart's method and findings and aspects of popular culture in the United States.

מתוך הספר

עמודים נבחרים

תוכן

d Living in the Present and Progressivism
141
Personalisation and Fragmentation
145
INVITATIONS TO A CANDYFLOSS WORLD THE NEWER MASS ART
155
i Weekly Family Magazines
159
ii Commercial Popular Songs
168
d The Results
175
THE NEWER MASS ART SEX IN SHINY PACKETS
186
b The Spicy Magazines
189

b Usthe Best and the Worst of It
52
Living and Letting Live
61
THE REAL WORLD OF PEOPLE
70
b Primary Religion
77
c Illustrations from Popular ArtPegs Paper
84
THE FULL RICH LIFE
94
Excursions into the Baroque
100
c Illustrations from Popular ArtClubSinging
107
Yielding Place to New
123
UNBENDING THE SPRINGS OF ACTION
125
b Tolerance and Freedom
130
The Group Sense and Democratic Egalitarianism
132
c Sexandviolence Novels
194
UNBENT SPRINGS A NOTE ON A SCEPTICISM WITHOUT TENSION
208
b Some Allegorical Figures
216
UNBENT SPRINGS A NOTE ON THE UPROOTED AND THE ANXIOUS
222
A Nostalgia for Ideals
233
CONCLUSION
244
b Summary of Present Tendencies in Mass Culture
254
Postscript
267
Notes and References
283
Bibliography
308
Index
313
זכויות יוצרים

מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל

מונחים וביטויים נפוצים

קטעים בולטים

עמוד 155 - For a multitude of causes, unknown to former times, are now acting with a combined force to blunt the discriminating powers of the mind, and unfitting it for all voluntary exertion to reduce it to a state of almost savage torpor.
עמוד 244 - I am almost ashamed to have spoken of the feeble endeavour made in these volumes to counteract it; and, reflecting upon the magnitude of the general evil, I should be oppressed with no dishonourable melancholy, had I not a deep impression of certain inherent and indestructible qualities of the human mind, and likewise of certain powers in the great and permanent objects that act upon it, which are equally inherent and indestructible...
עמוד 52 - O, reason not the need ! Our basest beggars Are in the poorest thing superfluous. Allow" not nature more than nature needs, Man's life is cheap as beast's.
עמוד 222 - For my part I am very sorry for him. It is an uneasy lot at best, to be what we call highly taught and yet not to enjoy : to be present at this great spectacle of life and never to be liberated from a small hungry shivering self — never to be fully possessed by the glory we behold, never to have our consciousness rapturously transformed into the vividness of a thought, the ardour of a passion, the energy of an action, but always to be scholarly and uninspired, ambitious and timid, scrupulous and...
עמוד 55 - Perfect" done into British, — the sentence Sir Daniel Gooch's mother repeated to him every morning when he was a boy going to work : — "Ever remember, my dear Dan, that you should look forward to being some day manager of that concern...
עמוד 143 - They sleep, and they rise up, and they find' themselves, now in Europe, now in Asia ; they see visions of great cities and wild regions ; they are in the marts of commerce, or 'amid the islands of the South ; they gaze on Pompey's...
עמוד 239 - But in each class there are born a certain number of natures with a curiosity about their best self, with a bent for seeing things as they are, for disentangling themselves from machinery, for simply concerning themselves with reason and the will of God, and doing their best to make these prevail;— for the pursuit, in a word, of perfection.
עמוד 141 - ... progress, that the finest vessel would become almost useless if it lasted beyond a certain number of years. In these words, which fell accidentally and on a particular subject from a man of rude attainments, I recognize the general and systematic idea upon which a great people directs all its concerns. Aristocratic nations are naturally too apt to narrow the scope of human perfectibility; democratic nations to expand it beyond compass.
עמוד 156 - ... and few in number; in democracies, they are far more numerous and far less difficult to please. The consequence is, that among aristocratic nations, no one can hope to succeed without...

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