Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying PracticesStuart Hall SAGE, 8 apr 1997 - 400 pagina's This broad-ranging text offers a comprehensive treatment of how visual images, language and discourse work as 'systems of representation'. Individual 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. They explore representation as a signifying practice in a rich diversity of social contexts and institutional sites: 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; the gendering of narratives in television soap operas. |
Inhoudsopgave
I | 1 |
13 | |
IV | 15 |
V | 30 |
VI | 36 |
VII | 41 |
VIII | 52 |
IX | 59 |
XXV | 219 |
XXVI | 233 |
XXVII | 243 |
XXVIII | 251 |
XXIX | 263 |
XXX | 270 |
285 | |
XXXIII | 287 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices Stuart Hall Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1997 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
advertising analysis anthropology approach argued artefacts audience Barthes Benin Benin Bronzes body chapter Charlotte Brunsdon classe populaire codes collection colour Comanche concept connotations constructed constructionist context Coronation Street culture discourse display documentary EastEnders ethnographic example exhibition fantasy female feminine fetishism fiction Figure film fixed flâneur forms Foucault France French Freud gender genre Henri Cartier-Bresson historical humanist idea identify identity ideological images interpretation knowledge language Linford Christie linguistic London looking magazine male masculinity meaning Musaeum Tradescantianum museum myth narrative nature objects painting paradigm Paradise Paris particular photographs Pitt Rivers Pitt Rivers Museum politics popular post-war power/knowledge practices produced question racial reference regime relation representation represented Robert Doisneau role Saussure scopophilia semiotic sense sexual signified signs soap opera social society specific spectator spectatorship stereotypes Stuart Hall subject-position symbolic television themes things viewer visual Wahgi Willy Ronis women
Populaire passages
Pagina 332 - For the perfect flaneur, for the passionate spectator, it is an immense joy to set up house in the heart of the multitude, amid the ebb and flow of movement, in the midst of the fugitive and the infinite.