Difference between revisions of "Williams 1977"
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Revision as of 15:48, 13 September 2017
Williams, Raymond. Marxism and Literature. Oxford: UP, 1977. Print.
- base/superstructure: sum of relations of production --> superstructure, which is scaffolded on the base
- superstructure: institutions
- forms of consciousness which express class view
- political and cultural practices: where awareness of economic conflict gets fought out
- 79: "according to the materialist conception of history the ultimately determining element in history is the production and reproduction of real life" - Engels
- why isn't book history more explicitly Marxist? In terms of intellectual genealogy and ideological politics it is but in explicit political terms it isn't
- determination: settling bounds, limits, exertion of pressures
- not opposed to direct agency: "we make our history ourselves, but in the first place under very definitive assumptions and conditions" (Engels)
- 85: objectivities passage - fill in
- 87: society quote - good to relate to Gaskell N and S
- productive forces: any and all of the means of the production and reproduction of real life
- qt on 93
- mediation vs reflection
- mediation is in the object itself
- hegemony
- state relations (classical) -- class relations (Marxism) - Gramsci: complex interlocking pol/soc/cultural forces based on distribution of power: dominance and subordination
- beyond ideology: "not only the conscious system of ideas/beliefs, but the whole lived social process as practically organized by specific and dominant meanings/values"
- hegemony is "the whole body of practices and expectations...on shaping perceptions of ourselves and our world" & ff. on 110
- Gramsci's solution: an alternative hegemony
- "grasp[ing] the hegemonic in its active and formative but also transformative processes" - unpack?
- where cultural processes, e.g., works of art, actually do authentically break with hegemony - but what does that look like?
- 128 qt
- think through the arg of "Structures of Feeling"
- 136: "now capitalist economic activity and cultural production are inseperable" -- they weren't in the C19, scale shifted earlier...
- implications of 137-8 direct for print culture studies
- sociology of culture -> add study of forms (what does that entail here?)
- qt about forms on 190: unpack?
- 191 rehabilitating New Criticism formalism and updating its project