Main Article Content

Jorge Llanes Jove
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
Spain
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7251-050X
Biography
Vol 4 No 16 (2022): Political Economy of Communication and Cultural Studies | Poverty, Hunger and Migration, Research articles
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15304/ricd.4.16.8420
Submitted: 22-04-2022 Accepted: 16-05-2022 Published: 06-07-2022
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Abstract

The aim of this article is to provide an historical and theoretical overview in order to trace the genealogy of British cultural studies from the birth of the New Left in the second half of the twentieth century. An analysis is made of the political context of the emerging post-war consumer society, as well as of the theoretical developments that sought to account for the cultural change favoured by the increased availability and access to consumer goods, the spread of literacy, the development of mass media and the proliferation of new cultural forms and lifestyles. The key contributions of E.P. Thompson, Richard Hoggart, Raymond Williams and Stuart Hall are outlined, and the critical points of encounter and disagreement that allow us to speak of an 'early New Left' during the period 1956-1962 are detailed, as well as of an original project of British cultural studies during the period 1964-1979. Ultimately, the nature of the theoretical debate leading to the centrality, within cultural studies, of the phenomenon of signification and the semiotic perspective of culture as a paradigm for analysing the influence of the media in the construction of social reality is outlined. The article concludes with an outline of the turning points which, to a large extent, allow us to understand the ambiguity of the fundamentally theoretical and academic developments in cultural studies from 1980 onwards, to the detriment of the popular will of the first stage.