Name:- Rathod
Neha R.
Class:- M.A. sem-2
Roll no:- 29
Email id:- neharathod108@gmail.com
Year:- 2016-2017
Paper:- 8
Assignment Topic:- Important features ofcultural studies.
Features of Cultural Studies
(1)
Power
Relation and its influence and shape on cultural practices:
In several instance earlier in this chapter we noted the cultural and new
historical emphases on power relationships. For example, we noted that cultural
critics assume ‘‘oppositional’’ roles in terms of power structures, wherever
they might be found. Veeser, we pointed out, credited the new historicists with
dealing with, ‘‘questions of politics, power, indeed on all matters that deeply
affected people’s practical lives’’. And of course there are the large emphases
on power in the matter of Jonathan Swift’s Laputa, as previously noted.
Let us now approach Shakespeare’s ‘‘HAMLET’’ with a view to
seeing power in its cultural context.
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, these
two characters that we study under the approach of cultural studies. After the
play within the play, Claudius is talking privately with Rosencrantz and
Guildenstern, Hamlet’s fellow students from Wittenberg. In response to
Claudius’s plan to send Hamlet to England, Rosencrantz delivers a speech
that-if read out of context-is both an excellent set of metaphors and a
summation of the Elizabethan concept of the role and power of Kingship:
The
singular and peculiar life is bound
With
all the strength and armor of the mind
To
keep itself from noyance, but much more
That
spirit upon whose weal depends and rests
The
lives of many. The cease of majesty
Dies
not alone, but like a gulf doth draw
What’s
near it with it. It is a massy wheel
Fixed
on the summit of the highest mount,
To
whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser things
Are
mortised and adjoined; which, when it falls,
Each
small annexment, petty consequence,
Attends
the boisterious ruin. Never alone
Did
the king sigh but with a general groan.
Taken alone, the passage is a thoughtful and imagistically successful
passage, worthy of a wise and accomplished statement.
But
how many readers and viewers of the play would rank this passage among the
best-known lines of the play-with Hamlet’s soliloquies, for instance, or with
the king’s effort to pray, or even with the aphorisms addressed by Polonius to
his son Laertes? We venture to say that the passage, intrinsically good if one
looks at it alone, is simply not well known.
Why?
Attention to the context
and to the speaker gives the answer. Guildenstern had just agreed that he and
Rosencrantz would do the king’s bidding. The agreement is only a reaffirmation
of what they had told the king when he first received them at court. Both
speeches are wholly in character, for Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are among
the jellyfish of Shakespeare’s characters. Easy it is to forget which of the
two speaks which lines-indeed easy it is to forget most of their lines
altogether. The
two are distinctly plot-driven:
Empty
of personality, sycophantic in a sniveling way, eager to curry favor with power
even if it means spying on their erstwhile friend. Weakly they admit, without
much skill at denial, that they ‘‘were sent for’’. Even less successfully they
try to play on Hamlet’s metaphorical ‘‘pipe,’’ to know his ‘‘stops,’’ when they
are forced to admit that they could not even handle the literal musical
instruments that Hamlet shows them. Still later these nonentities meet their
destined ‘‘non-beingness,’’ as it were, when Hamlet, who can play the
pipe so much more efficiently, substitutes their names in the death warrant
intended for him.
If ever we wished to study two characters who are marginalized, then let us
look upon Rosencrantz and Guildenstern.
The meanings of their
names hardly match what seems to be the essence of their characters. Murray
J. Levith, for example, has written that ‘‘Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are
from the Dutch-German: Literally, ‘garland of roses’ and ‘golden star.’
Although of religious origin, both names together sound singsong and odd to
English ears. Their jingling gives them lightness, and blurs the individuality
of the characters they label’’.
Lightness to be
sure. Harley Granville-Barker once wrote in an offhand way of the
reaction these two roles call up for actors. Commenting on Solanio
and Salarino from ‘‘The
Merchant of Venice’’, he noted that their roles are ‘‘cursed by
actors as the worst bores in the whole Shakespearean canon; not excepting, even
those other twin brethren in nonentity, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern’’.
Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern, they are pawns for Claudius first, for Hamlet second. Because
they know that the power on the hand of Claudius and their more constant motive
is to please the king, the power that has brought them here. Their fate,
however, is to displease mightily the prince, who will undermine them and
‘‘hoist with own petard.’’ Claudius was aware of power, clearly, when he
observed of Hamlet’s apparent madness that ‘‘Madness in great ones must not
unwatched go’’. With equal truth Rosencrantz and Guildenstern might have
observed that power in great ones also must not unwatched go.
In
short, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are no more than what Rosencrantz called a
‘‘small annexment,’’ a ‘‘petty consequence,’’ mere nothings for the ‘‘massy
wheel’’ of kings. Through this we can conclude that that type of characters
have same speech as hero has though they have not much attention as hero has.
We seemed in various movies that supporting characters sometimes gave the idea
that how to meet hero to heroine and then hero take action on that. Sometimes
what happen that supporting characters are more important than hero.
For Example- In the novel Tughlaq by
Girish karnad. No doubt that it is historical play but in
which Girish Karnad presented same thing. With the approach of the
cultural studies we seemed in this novel that both characters Aziz
and Aazam are marginalized but they both are having
more commonsense than the king Tughlaq has. For
example – When Tughlaq passed the rule that all coins
are translated into copper that time that both characters know that when we
translated coins into copper, every one made this coins and there is no any
comparison and hierarchy between any of them that is why they both of them
collected all silver coins with the thinking of that that when good king came
and changed this nonsense rule that time these all coins help him to became
rich. Not only in this matter but there are various matter that is proved that
that both characters are very intelligent than hero rather the king.
(2)
Cultural
studies is not simply the study of cultural as though it was a discrete entity
divorced from its social or political context. Its objective is to
understand culture in all its complex forms and to analyze the social and
political context within which it manifests itself.
(3)
Culture
in cultural studies always performs two functions: it is both the object
of study and the location of political criticism and action.
Cultural studies aims to be both an intellectual and a pragmatic enterprise.
(4)
Cultural
studies attempts to expose and reconcile the division of knowledge, to overcome
the split between tacit (that is, intuitive knowledge based on local cultures)
and objective (so-called universal) forms of knowledge. It assumes a common
identity and common interest between the knower and the known, between the
observer and what is being observed.
(5)
Cultural
studies is committed to a moral evaluation of modern society and to a
radical line of political action. The tradition of cultural studies is not
one of value-free scholarship but one committed to social reconstruction by
critical political involvement. Thus cultural studies aims to understand
and change the structures of dominance everywhere, but in industrial
capitalist societies in particular.
(6)
Features
of cultural studies is that it share four goals:
Cultural
Studies transcends the confines of a particular discipline such as literary
criticism or history.
Cultural
Studies is politically engaged as we discussed above the power relation which
is related with political things. Cultural critics see themselves as
‘‘oppositional,’’ not only within their own disciplines but to many of the
power structures of society at large. They question inequalities within power
structures and seek to discover models for restructuring relationships among
dominant and ‘‘minority’’ or ‘‘subaltern’’ discourses.
Cultural
Studies denies the separation of ‘‘high’’ and ‘‘low’’ or elite and popular
culture.
4 Cultural
Studies analyzes not only the cultural work, but also the means of production.
Conclusion:
In
short we can say that as we discussed the characteristics of cultural studies
it also have some own limitations. The weaknesses of cultural studies lie in
its very strengths, particularly its emphasis upon diversity of approach and
subject matter. Cultural Studies can at times seem merely an intellectual
smorgasbord in which the critic blithely combines artful helpings of texts and
objects and then ‘‘finds’’ deep connections between them, without adequately researching
what a culture means or how cultures have interacted.
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