International audience ; This article argues that, instead of assuming that we know what 'cultural citizenship' involves, we should investigate more closely the uncertainties about what constitutes the 'culture' (or cultures) of citizenship. The article argues for the distinctive contribution of cultural studies to the problem of democratic engagement, as usually framed within political science. It then reports some preliminary findings from the recently completed 'Media Consumption and the Future of Public Connection' project, which focus on the importance of social opportunities for talk about public issues, the possibilities of withdrawal from news because it presents issues which people can do nothing about, and alternative forms of collective connection through media (such as celebrity culture) which exhibit no effective link to public issues.
This article argues that, instead of assuming that we know what 'cultural citizenship' involves, we should investigate more closely the uncertainties about what constitutes the 'culture' (or cultures) of citizenship. The article argues for the distinctive contribution of cultural studies to the problem of democratic engagement, as usually framed within political science. It then reports some preliminary findings from the recently completed 'Media Consumption and the Future of Public Connection' project, which focus on the importance of social opportunities for talk about public issues, the possibilities of withdrawal from news because it presents issues which people can do nothing about, and alternative forms of collective connection through media (such as celebrity culture) which exhibit no effective link to public issues.
This article explores what cultural studies can learn from the detailed consideration of the individual voice in Bourdieu's (1999) The Weight of the World. This book addresses the criticism often made of Bourdieu's earlier work—that it ignored individual agency in favor of structure—through a depiction of French society's space of points of view. Based on in-depth interviews, it offers an intriguing methodology, although leaving unresolved methodological uncertainties and theoretical absences, including a neglect of the role of media and popular culture in everyday experience. To build on Bourdieu's work, the conclusion suggests that we explore how a range of social categories derived from media and popular culture are employed in everyday action and thought.
In: New media & society: an international and interdisciplinary forum for the examination of the social dynamics of media and information change, Band 3, Heft 3, S. 385-389
Intro -- The Mediated Construction of Reality -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- 1 Introduction -- PART I Constructing the Social World -- 2 The Social World as Communicative Construction -- 3 History as Waves of Mediatization -- 4 How We Live with Media -- PART II Dimensions of the Social World -- 5 Space -- 6 Time -- 7 Data -- PART III Agency in the Social World -- 8 Self -- 9 Collectivities -- 10 Order -- 11 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Index.
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext: