Cultural Materialism
Cultural Materialism
Cultural Materialism
► Advantages.
* Written in a far more accessible way than post-structuralist theory.
* It presents its data and draws its conclusions in a less dense way
* Material is often fascinating and distinctive.
* New territory.
* Political edge is always sharp, avoids problems of straight Marxist criticism.
► "New Historicism focuses on the way literature expresses-
and sometimes disguises-power relations at work in the
social context in which the literature was produced, often
this involves making connections between a literary work
and other kinds of texts. Literature is often shown to
“negotiate” conflicting power interests. New historicism has
made its biggest mark on literary studies of the
Renaissances and Romantic periods and has revised
motions of literature as privileged, apolitical writing. Much
new historicism focuses on the marginalization of subjects
such as those identified as witches, the insane, heretics,
vagabonds, and political prisoners."
► --Jay Stevenson
Cultural Materialism
► Cultural materialism is a theory which views culture as a
productive process, focusing on arts such as literature.
Within this culture art is translated as a social use of
material means of production.
► The concept of "literature" is seen as a social development,
which according to Raymond Williams, only truly
developed between the 18th and 19th century, within our
culture. The critic explains in his essay Culture is Ordinary,
„a culture is a whole way of life, and the arts are part of a
social organisation which economic change clearly radically
effects”.
► Cultural Materialism
► Cultural materialism is “a politicized form of historiography.”
► -Graham Holderness
► Raymond Williams coined the term Cultural Materialism.
Jonathan Dollimore and Allen Sinfield made current and
defined Cultural materialism as “designating a critical
method which has four characteristics:
► Historical Context: what was happening at the time the
text was written.
► Theoretical Method: Incorporating older methods of
theory—Structuralism, Post-structuralism etc.
► Political Commitment: Incorporating non-conservative
and non-Christian frameworks—such as Feminist and
Marxist theory.
► Textual Analysis: building on theoretical analysis of
mainly canonical texts that have become “prominent
cultural icons.”
► Culture: What does this term mean in the context
of Cultural Materialism?
► Culture in this sense does not limit itself to “high
culture” but includes all forms of culture like TV
and pop music.
► Materialism: What does this term mean in the
context of Cultural Materialism?
► Materialism is at odds with idealism. Idealists
believe in the transcendent ability of ideas while
materialist believe that culture cannot transcend
its material trappings.
► In this way, Cultural Materialism is an
offshoot of Marxist criticism.
► History, to a cultural materialist, is what has happened and
what is happening now. In other words, Cultural Materialists
not only create criticism of a text by contextualizing it with
its own time period, but with successive generations
including our own. Cultural Materialism bridges the gap
between Marxism and Post-Modernism.
► Some things that Cultural Materialist might look at when
analyzing Shakespeare:
► Elizabethan Drama during its own time period
► The publishing history of Shakespeare through the ages
► That weird movie version of Romeo and Juliet with Leonardo
D. in it
► The tourism and kitsch surrounding Shakespeare today
► Raymond Williams
► Raymond Williams added to the outlook of Cultural
Materialism by employing “structures of feeling.” These are
values that are changing and being formed as we live and
react to the material world around us. They challenge
dominant forms of ideology and imply that values are organic
and non-stagnant.
► Cultural Materialism embraces change and gives us
different (changing) perspectives based on what we
chose to suppress or reveal in readings from the past.
► Shakespeare is one example of how Cultural Materialism can
change our point of view, and even our values, in regard to
past texts. Many Cultural Materialist have challenged the
fetishistic relationship conservative Britain has with
Shakespeare.
► "Raymond William's term for the theory of culture he develops in the
course of a long dialogue with Marxism, and which ascribes a central
importance to the role of structures of feeling. Williams is critical of the
base/structure model so often used by Marxists to analyze cultural
phenomena on the grounds that it makes, for example, the literature
dependent, secondary and superstructural, or subsumes it into the
wider category of ideology. Cultural Materialism stresses that culture is
a constitutive social process which actively creates different ways of
life. Similarly, signification or the creation of meaning is viewed as a
practical material activity which cannot be consigned to a secondary
lever or explained in terms of a primary level of economic activity.
Consciousness itself is not a reflection of a basic or more material level
of existence, but an active mode of social being. Williams is also critical
of the technological determinism of theorists such as Mcluhan who
argues that communications media have independent properties that
impose themselves automatically ('the medium is the message'). He
does not deny that the function of the media is determined, but insists
that its determination is social and always bound up with sociocultural
practices."
► --David Macey
► "Britain's reply to new historicism was the rather different creed of cultural
materialism, which-appropriately for a society with more vigorous socialist traditions-
displayed a political cutting edge largely lacking in its transatlantic counterpart. The
phrase “cultural materialism,” had been coined in the 1980s by Britain's premier
socialist critic, Raymond Williams, to describe a form of analysis which examined
culture less as a set of isolated artistic monuments then as a material formation,
complete with its own modes of production, power-effects, social relation, identifiable
audiences, historically conditioned thought forms. It was a way of bringing an
unashamedly materialist analysis to bear on that realm of social existence-'culture'-
which was thought by conventional criticism to be the very antithesis of the material;
and its ambition was less to relate 'culture' to 'society,' in William's own earlier style,
than to examine culture as always-already social and material in its roots. It could be
seen either as an enrichment or a dilution of classical Marxism: enrichment, because it
carried materialism boldly through to the 'spiritual' itself; dilution, because in doing so
it blurred the distinction, vital to orthodox Marxism, between the economic and the
cultural. The method was, so Williams himself announced, 'compactible' with Marxism,
but it took issue with the kind of Marxism which had relegated culture to secondary,
'superstructural' status, and resembled the new historicist in its refusal to enforce such
hierarchies. It also paralleled the new historicism on taking on board a whole range of
topics-notably, sexuality, feminism, ethnic and post-colonial questions-to which Marxist
criticism had traditionally given short shrift. To this extent, cultural materialism formed
a kind of bridge between Marxism and postmodernism, radically revising the former
while wary of the more modish, uncritical, unhistorical aspects of the latter. This,
indeed, might be said to be roughly the stand to which most British left cultural critics
nowadays take up."
► --Terry Eagleton
► Differences Between New Historicism and Cultural Materialism
►
As you can see and read in Barry, New Historicism and Cultural Materialism have a
significant overlap. In fact the main difference is politics. There are three main
differences:
►
1. Cultural Materialists concentrate on the the interventions whereby men and women
make their own history, where New Historicists focus on the the power of social and
ideological structures which restrain them. A contrast between political optimism and
political pessimism.
2. Cultural Materialists view New Historicists as cutting themselves off from effective
political positions by their acceptance of a particular version of post-structuralism.
►
3. New Historicists will situate the literary text in the political situation of its own day,
while the Cultural Materialists situate it within that of our own.
What Cultural Materialist Do
► 1. They read the literary text (very often a Renaissance
play) in such a way as to enable us to 'recover its
histories', that is, the context of exploitation from which it
emerged
► 2. At the same time, they foreground those elements in
the work's present transmission and contextualising
which caused those histories to be lost in the first place,
(for example, the 'heritage' industry's packaging of
Shakespeare in terms of history-as-pageant, national
bard, cultural icon, and so on)
► * political agenda: 3. They use a combination of marxist
and feminist approaches to the text, especially in order to
do the first of these (above), and in order to fracture the
previous dominance of conservative social, political, and
religious assumptions in Shakespeare criticism in
particular
(From Peter Barry, Beginning Theory, 1995)
What Cultural Materialist Do
► 4. They use the technique of close textual analysis, but
often employ structuralist and post-structuralist
techniques, especially to mark a break with the inherited
tradition of close textual analysis within the framework of
conservative cultural and social assumptions
► 5. At the same time, they work mainly within traditional
notions of the canon, on the grounds that writing about
more obscure texts hardly ever constitutes an effective
political intervention (for instance, in debates about the
school curriculum or national identity)