Description
To balance this focus on the institution of cultural norms, Donald emphasizes the dynamics of fantasy and desire in their negotiation. He therefore juxtaposes the normative practices of education and broadcasting against more transgressive forms of popular culture: pornography, racist thrillers like Fu Manchu, vampire films, and what he calls the vulgar sublime. Finally, drawing on postmodern debates about community and democracy, he sketches a context for reforms in broadcasting and presents a provocative alternative to orthodox progressive ideas about education from the primary school to the university.
About the Author
James Donald is Senior Lecturer in Media Studies at the University of Sussex. His previous books include Politics and Ideology (edited with Stuart Hall), Fantasy and the Cinema, and ""Race,"" Culture and Difference (edited with Ali Rattansi). He is an editor of the journal New Formations.
Reviews
His fascinating argument contributes to those important debates that are changing our sense of what it means to become intellectually 'responsible' and to create a community of cultural critics. -- Homi Bhabha
James Donald sounds a refreshingly caustic note among the usual dull certainties of current education debate. Sceptical about the belief that schooling changes anything or anyone, his enthusiasm is for education as a site of argument-about history, about language, about the very idea of the democratic subject. -- Simon Frith
Book Information
ISBN 9780860915553
Author James Donald
Format Paperback
Page Count 214
Imprint Verso Books
Publisher Verso Books
Weight(grams) 454g
Dimensions(mm) 236mm * 155mm * 18mm