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Understanding Stuart Hall
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Understanding Stuart Hall

First Edition

April 2004 | 222 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
'This is the most lucid and engaged account of Stuart Hall's work. Meticulously, and with an exemplary generosity, Helen Davis patiently unravels the threads of Hall's intellectual history. The result is a most useful and thoughtful book, which could prove to be indispensable for students of cultural studies'

- Graeme Turner, University of Queensland

Understanding Stuart Hall traces the development of one of the most influential and respected figures within cultural studies.

Focusing on Stuart Hall's writings over a period of nearly fifty years, this volume offers students and academics a cogent and exploratory route through complex and overlapping areas of analysis. In her critical assessment of Hall's most important contributions to academic and public debate, Davis shows the extent to which his analyses of race and ethnicity have been informed by early studies of Marxism, class and 'societies structured in dominance'. Davis offers fresh insight into the formation of one of the most prolific, charismatic and controversial intellectuals of his generation.

Despite having been branded a 'cultural pessimist', Stuart Hall has long been associated with encouraging new, cutting-edge scholarship within the field. This volume concludes with a discussion of Hall's most recent political and academic interventions and his continuing commitment to innovation within the visual arts.


 
Introduction
 
Encountering the Mother Country
 
A Deadly Serious Matter
 
The Media in Question
 
Wrestling with the Angels
 
The Politics of Representation
 
Taking the Risk of Living Dangerously
 
In the Belly of the Beast
 
`Fragmented and Concrete', in Conversation with Stuart Hall

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ISBN: 9781446226063

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ISBN: 9780761947141
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