Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought
The field of cultural studies is founded upon the belief that there are no essential (ahistorical or transhistorical) limits separating theory from practice. Thus, it rejects out of hand a central principle of the West's premodern tradition of thought, which held that political theory must alwa...
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ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.302192014-02-13T03:57:24ZCultural studies and the challenge of past thoughtStaring, Scott Patrick.Culture -- Study and teaching.Culture -- Philosophy.The field of cultural studies is founded upon the belief that there are no essential (ahistorical or transhistorical) limits separating theory from practice. Thus, it rejects out of hand a central principle of the West's premodern tradition of thought, which held that political theory must always be tempered by a practical awareness of human nature. The move away from this older belief in natural limits is largely carried out in the name of diversity, a sincere wish to promote openness and tolerance toward the various ends that humans may choose to pursue. Unfortunately, this ground-clearing exercise runs into certain contradictions when it is realized that absolute tolerance can provide no consistent argument against its opposite, extreme intolerance. A more subtle effect of this tolerance, however---and one that I will argue is in evidence in much cultural studies research today---is the inability to ground important political decisions. This inability leads to what Stuart Hall has called a "formalization" of the field: unwilling to commit to a particular practical vision, theory becomes locked within a self-referential sphere, or limits itself to "low risk" practical discussions (e.g., the cultural implications of record collecting). This trend towards political ineffectuality, I argue, can only be moderated by subjecting cultural studies' deepest assumptions concerning human nature to philosophical doubt. Following the argument of Leo Strauss, I propose that the most radical challenge to the mainstream of current thought is found in premodern writings. Thus, this thesis is at once a critique of the "present-mindedness" that I have witnessed in cultural studies and a limited defense of past thought.McGill UniversitySzanto, George (advisor)1999Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: 001763290proquestno: MQ64195Theses scanned by UMI/ProQuest.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Master of Arts (Graduate Communications Program.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=30219 |
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Culture -- Study and teaching. Culture -- Philosophy. |
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Culture -- Study and teaching. Culture -- Philosophy. Staring, Scott Patrick. Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
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The field of cultural studies is founded upon the belief that there are no essential (ahistorical or transhistorical) limits separating theory from practice. Thus, it rejects out of hand a central principle of the West's premodern tradition of thought, which held that political theory must always be tempered by a practical awareness of human nature. The move away from this older belief in natural limits is largely carried out in the name of diversity, a sincere wish to promote openness and tolerance toward the various ends that humans may choose to pursue. Unfortunately, this ground-clearing exercise runs into certain contradictions when it is realized that absolute tolerance can provide no consistent argument against its opposite, extreme intolerance. A more subtle effect of this tolerance, however---and one that I will argue is in evidence in much cultural studies research today---is the inability to ground important political decisions. This inability leads to what Stuart Hall has called a "formalization" of the field: unwilling to commit to a particular practical vision, theory becomes locked within a self-referential sphere, or limits itself to "low risk" practical discussions (e.g., the cultural implications of record collecting). This trend towards political ineffectuality, I argue, can only be moderated by subjecting cultural studies' deepest assumptions concerning human nature to philosophical doubt. Following the argument of Leo Strauss, I propose that the most radical challenge to the mainstream of current thought is found in premodern writings. Thus, this thesis is at once a critique of the "present-mindedness" that I have witnessed in cultural studies and a limited defense of past thought. |
author2 |
Szanto, George (advisor) |
author_facet |
Szanto, George (advisor) Staring, Scott Patrick. |
author |
Staring, Scott Patrick. |
author_sort |
Staring, Scott Patrick. |
title |
Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
title_short |
Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
title_full |
Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
title_fullStr |
Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
title_sort |
cultural studies and the challenge of past thought |
publisher |
McGill University |
publishDate |
1999 |
url |
http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=30219 |
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