Written history is literary artifact: taking this as its
starting point, Discourse and Culture argues that the Foucauldian
concept of the shifting scale of linguistic and historic values
must be the central focus for a new interpretation of American
culture and ideology. Six major American historical figures are
evaluated as products of the conflict between subordinate and
dominant influences in American society: steelmaster Andrew
Carnegie; labour leader Terence V. Powderly; historian of the West
Frederick J. Turner; social reconstructionist Jane Addams; race
leader Booker T. Washington; and black nationalist W.E.B. du Bois.
Discourse and Culture re-assesses the relationship between ideology
and cultural formation by asking if cultural change can be
explained as a function of discourse. The book draws upon the ideas
of Althusser, Gramsci and Hayden to address this issue, which lies
at the very heart of contemporary debate on the character of
cultural history.
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