Communications As Cultural Science
Communications As Cultural Science
Communications As Cultural Science
by Raymond Williams
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Journal of Communication, Summer 1974
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Communications As Cultural Science
naturalized, and those which have not will have been identified as
conscious and isolable modernisms, that without this dimension of open-
ness to the fundamental processes much of the working analysis will be
naive, or will at best be limited to the unexamined conventions of its
culture. Nevertheless, the study is concerned with practice. I t draws to it
a proportion-now markedly increasing-of those students whose received
discipline is the understanding of cultural artifacts.
Over many centuries, ways have been found of talking to the point,
though in varying and usually controversial ways, about poems, paintings,
buildings, songs, novels, films, symphonies, newspapers, advertisements,
political speeches; styles of dress; a whole range of cultural practice which
may be separated as artifacts for more specific study, but which have
also to be seen as the practical communication-or, more strictly, that
special part of it which has survived because it is in some way recorded-
of a particular people or class of a people at a particular place and time.
Many of the disciplines which deal with these artifacts are remarkably
developed in their own terms, and i n an academic context can separate out,
from each other and from that more central perception that they were made
by real men in real places in real and significant social relationships.
More crucially, in their concentration on artifacts, the disciplines, espe-
cially as they develop in scholarly and historical ways, can convert all
practices to artifacts, and in the shadow of this delusion suppose them-
selves absolved, in the name of the excellence and achievement of the
past, from the comparable practices of their own time.
It is then not only, to take an example, that in the study of literature
at Oxford there was for many years a classical time-stop at 1830, since
the practice of our great-great-grandfathers and their embarrassingly press-
ing decendants was altogether too turbulent and uncertain; or that in the
study of the history of the English language at Cambridge there is in
effect a time-stop at the point in the late middle ages when the language
became that which we now write and speak and keep changing. I t is also
that a practice has to become an artifact, and moreover an artifact of the
kind that is conventionally found in libraries and museums, to deserve
much attention. A seventeenth-century political pamphlet deserves disci-
plined attention; a current party political broadcast does not.
There is, then, a resistance, in the name of standards, to a very wide
area of contemporary cultural practice; but moreover, from the habits
of mind thus induced (the conversion of practices into artifacts, of real
expressive and communicative process into isolable objects) several
modes of analysis which depend on the recognition of practice-the recon-
struction of composition, the study of social relations within which the
practice occurred, the study of related practices which lead to distinguish-
able artifacts but which are still related-all these and other modes become
attenuated or unattempted and the discipline narrows, losing its touch
with life.
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Communications As Cultural Science
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Journal of Communication, Summer 1974
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Communications As Cultural Science
they left out politics) was first how, then whether, it corrupted people.
T h e residual result is that it is still easier to get resources for impact-
studies-perhaps we should call them corruption-studies-in television and
the like than for any other single kind of work. Much of what is then
called the sociology of communications is this kind of impact-study, and
indeed some of it is valuable, though it is always necessary to add, as
everyone trained in really precise observation of behavior will confirm, that
the scientific discovery and demonstration of effects is one of the toughest
areas you can enter.
For, again, there is corruption and corruption. I would like to see a
system of parallel grants: for every inquiry into the consumption of tele-
vision or the like, equal resources for an inquiry into production. T h e
great or at least large institutions of modern communications need intensive
and continuous study. This has so far been done only in part-time and
occasional ways. And I should add while I am saying this that it seems
to me very significant that the most detailed information that exists in
Britain about reading habits, and some associated behavior, is in the
regular and highly specific surveys and reports of the Institute of Practi-
tioners in Advertising: a highly intentional form of research, to say the
least, but one which puts any comparable scholarly work in this country
to shame.
Studies of institutions, in the full sense-of the productive institutions,
of their audiences, and of the forms of relationship between them-will
have to be carried out by procedures of social science from which, in result
and by example, all cultural analysts will learn a great deal. Indeed in
this respect the orthodox suspicion of cultural studies can be seen as
justified, and it can only be overcome, from both sides, by practical work.
But, of course, this kind of study does not exhaust cultural analysis, or
leave it merely to describe, to analyze, and to generalize particular works.
Detailed aesthetic analysis tends to be continued and extended. But the
real questions arise when we come to forms. Questions about forms in
communications are also questions about institutions and about the orga-
nization 01 social relationships. Let me give an example.
When I first started reading social and political science, at about the
time when I was getting interested in communications, I came across a
formula which I was told was standard for communication sciences: “Who
says what to whom with what effect?” I was reasonably impressed, after
some of my literary studies. T h a t there was a “who” and a “whom” as
well as a “what” seemed encouraging, and “effect,” of course, we were all
talking about anyway. But as I went on, I noticed what might be called
a diminution of the “what”: a problem that arises, incidentally, in many
communication studies, where the relationship-the “who” and the “whom”
that communication postulates-can come to override the full substance
of the communication, though the relationship and the substance must
be seen as in fact inseparable.
T o anyone with literary experience, the “what” is irreducible, as well
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JournaE of Communication, Summer 1974
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Communications As Cicltrcral Science
around his role in this precise situation: questions that could be approached,
among other ways, by analyzing the notion5 of presentation and intro-
duction, of chairing and interviewing, or the older notions of mediator
and moderator.
Some of these could be tackled with known tools of social analysis;
others would require a different dimension of analysis. Someone trained
in the analysis of language would in any case have much to contribute:
descriptively, as with someone noting and analyzing the conscious politics;
critically, to attend to the forms of the discourse-the diction and imagery
but also the basic strategies of address, the encounters and evasions, the
mode of question and answer and rhetorical question and non-answer:
for all of which, if we would use them, we have very serviceable tools.
We would need someone sensitized to dramatic analysis: to the sig-
nificance of physical groupings, to take only one example, and to the
modulation of these by the specific television environment both internally,
within the studio, and in quite different ways in the transmitted version
(whether edited or live); a recognition of the significance of viewpoint,
close-up, variation of angle, cutting-a technical yet central kind of
analysis of the precise communication situation.
We would need an understanding of the positive requirements of the
technology and the overlapping but not identical version of those require-
ments adopted b y the professionals now using it. For very close work
we would need the techniques developed by experimental psychologists
for precise analysis of verbal and nonverbal interaction; indeed, their
combination with dramatic and cinematic analysis would be extraordinarily
instructive. And we would have to go on to include the other part of the
communication situation-the viewers: not only studying persistent effects
and influences but recording and discussing them in more precise ways
while the process is still alive.
We can describe all these methods serially, but most of the really
interesting questions would only arise when we came to put the findings
together or, more likely, to push each other's findings around: around
the proposition, for example, that the television discussion is not only a
political event but also a cultural form, and that the form indicates
many overt and covert relationships.
T h e work will be done because I think here are now enough of us
who want to work in these ways to survive the defenses of vested interests,
the general drizzle of discouragement, and even the more deeply-rooted
inertia of contemporary orthodox culture; to announce in effect an open
conspiracy: that in new ways, by trial and error but always openly and
publicly, we shall do this work because it needs to be done.
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