Skip to main content

Collective and Democratic Experiments in the Politics of Knowledge in Britain since 1968: Reflections on Cultural Studies, History Workshop and Feminism.

Gwinn, I., 2020. Collective and Democratic Experiments in the Politics of Knowledge in Britain since 1968: Reflections on Cultural Studies, History Workshop and Feminism. Moving the Social: Journal of Social History and the History of Social Movements, 64 ('1968' in Britain), 9 - 31.

Full text available as:

[img]
Preview
PDF
Moving-the-Social_64_02_Gwinn_09-31_Korrekturfahne1 with corrections.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.

1MB

DOI: 10.46586/mts.64.2020.9-31

Abstract

The tumultuous events of 1968 had a profound and lasting impact on society, culture and politics on a global scale. In Britain, the effects of the upswing in radicalism were powerfully registered in developments and departures in cultural and intellectual life. Recent contributions to the history of the intellectual Left during this period, including the traditions of the New Left, cultural studies, and feminism, have documented many of the decisive shifts in theoretical outlooks and thematic focus. Less frequently acknowledged, however, has been the formation of a distinctive ‘politics of knowledge’, which contested established hierarchies and norms of academic work through forms of collective and democratic practice. This article argues that this project was a decisive outcome and achievement of the post-68 conjuncture, becoming part of a much broader democratising front in the 1970s and 80s that centred upon sites of cultural and intellectual expression. The key features of this alternative apparatus of intellectual production are explored in the context of the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, History Workshop, and the scholarly endeavours of second-wave feminism, which paid critical attention to the possibilities, tensions and open contradictions intrinsic to this way of combining politics and intellectual practice.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:2197-0386
Uncontrolled Keywords:1968; Britain; history; Cultural Studies; feminism; knowledge; politics; participatory democracy
Group:Faculty of Media & Communication
ID Code:34877
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:25 Nov 2020 11:46
Last Modified:14 Mar 2022 14:25

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

More statistics for this item...
Repository Staff Only -