Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg’s book Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture

E650592

Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg’s book *Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture* is an influential edited collection of essays that explores contemporary cultural theory through a Marxist lens, featuring foundational texts in cultural studies and postcolonial critique.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Statements (52)

Predicate Object
instanceOf academic book
edited volume
academicField critical theory
cultural theory
humanities
approach Marxist approach to culture
interdisciplinary approach
discipline Marxist theory
cultural studies
literary theory
editor Cary Nelson NERFINISHED
Lawrence Grossberg NERFINISHED
genre theory anthology
hasContributor Andreas Huyssen NERFINISHED
Andrew Ross NERFINISHED
Barbara Harlow NERFINISHED
Cary Nelson NERFINISHED
Chantal Mouffe NERFINISHED
Cornel West NERFINISHED
Dominick LaCapra NERFINISHED
Edward Said NERFINISHED
Ernesto Laclau NERFINISHED
Fredric Jameson NERFINISHED
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak NERFINISHED
Henry Giroux NERFINISHED
John Frow NERFINISHED
Lawrence Grossberg NERFINISHED
Meaghan Morris NERFINISHED
Paul Smith NERFINISHED
Simon During NERFINISHED
Stuart Hall NERFINISHED
Terry Eagleton NERFINISHED
Tony Bennett NERFINISHED
language English
mainSubject Marxism NERFINISHED
cultural politics
cultural studies
cultural theory
hegemony
ideology
political economy of culture
postcolonial critique
postmodernism
representation
subjectivity
notableFor bridging Marxism and contemporary cultural theory
foundational status in postcolonial cultural critique
influential collection in cultural studies
theoreticalOrientation Gramscian theory of hegemony
Western Marxism NERFINISHED
postcolonial theory
poststructuralism

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

essay "Can the Subaltern Speak?" firstPublishedIn Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg’s book Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture
subject surface form: Can the Subaltern Speak?