Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies

This paper deals with the discourses of visuality in the intellectual history of British cultural studies as it developed in the postwar period at the University of Birmingham's Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS). Visual representation has long been perceived by western thought...

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Main Author: Carnie, Henry Joseph
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12404
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-124042018-01-05T17:36:22Z Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies Carnie, Henry Joseph This paper deals with the discourses of visuality in the intellectual history of British cultural studies as it developed in the postwar period at the University of Birmingham's Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS). Visual representation has long been perceived by western thought as a terrain unaffected by perception, language and conceptions; however, recent thought has contested this notion and in the process problematized cultural "ways of seeing." The paper asks how the subjects of British cultural studies were produced but also how and why they were conceived through a visual discourse. It discusses the extent to which this visual discourse at the CCCS was ruptured by the breaking in of previously "invisible" subjects and how this visual discourse itself actually facilitated this rupture. The paper approaches this discussion through a close analysis of key texts produced at the CCCS. It demonstrates that the intellectual trajectory of British cultural studies at the CCCS involved a shift from an oral means of cultural expression to a visual one and then back to an oral form. It examines how the interventions by thinkers on gender and race influenced this shift. The paper concludes that visuality and orality were held in constant tension throughout the intellectual history of British cultural studies at the CCCS, but that a more inclusive and democratic form of orality finally gained ascendancy over a visuality, which was inherently implicated in social and cultural structures of power. Arts, Faculty of History, Department of Graduate 2009-08-20T18:39:00Z 2009-08-20T18:39:00Z 2002 2002-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12404 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 6613406 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description This paper deals with the discourses of visuality in the intellectual history of British cultural studies as it developed in the postwar period at the University of Birmingham's Center for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS). Visual representation has long been perceived by western thought as a terrain unaffected by perception, language and conceptions; however, recent thought has contested this notion and in the process problematized cultural "ways of seeing." The paper asks how the subjects of British cultural studies were produced but also how and why they were conceived through a visual discourse. It discusses the extent to which this visual discourse at the CCCS was ruptured by the breaking in of previously "invisible" subjects and how this visual discourse itself actually facilitated this rupture. The paper approaches this discussion through a close analysis of key texts produced at the CCCS. It demonstrates that the intellectual trajectory of British cultural studies at the CCCS involved a shift from an oral means of cultural expression to a visual one and then back to an oral form. It examines how the interventions by thinkers on gender and race influenced this shift. The paper concludes that visuality and orality were held in constant tension throughout the intellectual history of British cultural studies at the CCCS, but that a more inclusive and democratic form of orality finally gained ascendancy over a visuality, which was inherently implicated in social and cultural structures of power. === Arts, Faculty of === History, Department of === Graduate
author Carnie, Henry Joseph
spellingShingle Carnie, Henry Joseph
Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
author_facet Carnie, Henry Joseph
author_sort Carnie, Henry Joseph
title Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
title_short Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
title_full Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
title_fullStr Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
title_full_unstemmed Seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies
title_sort seeing is conceiving : gender, race and visual semantics at the birmingham centre for contemporary cultural studies
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12404
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