Description

Book Synopsis
Americans want it both ways. They are committed to cultural diversity, yet demand an endless variety of cheap consumer goods from a global system that destroys distinct ways of life. Americans have papered over this paradox by embracing the rhetoric of diversity and multiculturalism, hiding the extent to which they have accepted homogenized ways of working and living. In this groundbreaking work, David Steigerwald exposes this paradox and examines how culture, rather than economics or politics, became the framework for understanding human affairs. Steigerwald criticizes contemporary cultural studies and multiculturalism, showing how they lead, not to true understanding and acceptance, but to mass consumption and bureaucratic power. Culture''s Vanities moves debate away from the culture wars by examining what culture actually means and how the modern understanding of it can only destroy true diversity.

Trade Review
Bemoaning the ubiquitous commodification of culture in our age of globalization—and thus culture's waning power to effect social change—Steigerwald calls for a 'vigorous cosmopolitanism' that finds its strength not through amorphous 'cultural resistance,' but through concrete political struggles against exploitative global economic forces. Clear-headed and provocative, Culture's Vanities boldly recasts William Morris's aesthetic-democratic vision for our time. -- Manfred B. Steger, Professor of Global Politics, University of Hawai'i-Manoa
Attention Wal-Mart shoppers, cultural populists, recovering ethnics, megachurchgoers, affirmative action officers, hip-hop entrepreneurs, celebrity intellectuals, and all others who hawk the debased cultural currency of standardized commodities and uprooted identities. In David Steigerwald, you have met your match. Whenever he hears the word 'culture' Steigerwald reaches for his wit-honed scalpel, and quickly disembowels a prevailing catch-word of the contemporary 'diversity' industry, one that has ironically obscured the increasingly homogeneous world of ephemeral goods and alienated experience fostered by global capitalism. A dyspeptic rant—and a marvelous one at that. -- Robert Westbrook, professor of history, University of Rochester; author of John Dewey and American Democracy
Today culture reigns. It seems to explain everything and justify even more. But culture now seems to refer more to matters of consumer choice, light entertainment, or supposed traits of identity groups than the search for meaning and permanence in works of fine craftsmanship or the formation of real human bonds. The brilliance of Culture's Vanities is its irrevocable critique of the contemporary use of the culture concept—irrevocable because careful readers will never again encounter culture's misuse without hearing Steigerwald's sage corrective. A true note ringing out above the din, Steigerwald's study is both welcome and refreshing. We can only hope that the world has not lost itself so much to its vanities as to fail to acknowledge this study for the remarkable intellectual achievement and call to conscience it is. -- Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, professor of history, Syracuse University
The author provides a well-written, insightful survey of workplace alienation and the loss of craft; the ironies of identity claims, multiculturalism, and 'managed diversity;' and the crisis of the black intellectual, with special attention to Cornel West. Stiegerwald's insistence that analysis by grounded in attention to actual existing conditions continues the discussion among leftist scholars about the direction of critical inquiry. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. -- G.M. Massey, University of Wyoming * CHOICE *

Table of Contents
Preface: The Follies of Cultural Determinism in an Age of Anti-Culture Chapter 1: On the Rise of Cultural Determinism in an Age of Anti-Culture Chapter 2: The Misappropriation of Culture in the Contemporary Mind Chapter 3: Work and Culture Chapter 4: Culture and Identity Chapter 5: Race and Culture Chapter 6: How the Left Got Cultured Chapter 7: The Virtues of Cosmopolitanism, Complexity, and Taste

Cultures Vanities

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    A Paperback by David Steigerwald

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      View other formats and editions of Cultures Vanities by David Steigerwald

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
      Publication Date: 10/8/2004 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780742511972, 978-0742511972
      ISBN10: 0742511979

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Americans want it both ways. They are committed to cultural diversity, yet demand an endless variety of cheap consumer goods from a global system that destroys distinct ways of life. Americans have papered over this paradox by embracing the rhetoric of diversity and multiculturalism, hiding the extent to which they have accepted homogenized ways of working and living. In this groundbreaking work, David Steigerwald exposes this paradox and examines how culture, rather than economics or politics, became the framework for understanding human affairs. Steigerwald criticizes contemporary cultural studies and multiculturalism, showing how they lead, not to true understanding and acceptance, but to mass consumption and bureaucratic power. Culture''s Vanities moves debate away from the culture wars by examining what culture actually means and how the modern understanding of it can only destroy true diversity.

      Trade Review
      Bemoaning the ubiquitous commodification of culture in our age of globalization—and thus culture's waning power to effect social change—Steigerwald calls for a 'vigorous cosmopolitanism' that finds its strength not through amorphous 'cultural resistance,' but through concrete political struggles against exploitative global economic forces. Clear-headed and provocative, Culture's Vanities boldly recasts William Morris's aesthetic-democratic vision for our time. -- Manfred B. Steger, Professor of Global Politics, University of Hawai'i-Manoa
      Attention Wal-Mart shoppers, cultural populists, recovering ethnics, megachurchgoers, affirmative action officers, hip-hop entrepreneurs, celebrity intellectuals, and all others who hawk the debased cultural currency of standardized commodities and uprooted identities. In David Steigerwald, you have met your match. Whenever he hears the word 'culture' Steigerwald reaches for his wit-honed scalpel, and quickly disembowels a prevailing catch-word of the contemporary 'diversity' industry, one that has ironically obscured the increasingly homogeneous world of ephemeral goods and alienated experience fostered by global capitalism. A dyspeptic rant—and a marvelous one at that. -- Robert Westbrook, professor of history, University of Rochester; author of John Dewey and American Democracy
      Today culture reigns. It seems to explain everything and justify even more. But culture now seems to refer more to matters of consumer choice, light entertainment, or supposed traits of identity groups than the search for meaning and permanence in works of fine craftsmanship or the formation of real human bonds. The brilliance of Culture's Vanities is its irrevocable critique of the contemporary use of the culture concept—irrevocable because careful readers will never again encounter culture's misuse without hearing Steigerwald's sage corrective. A true note ringing out above the din, Steigerwald's study is both welcome and refreshing. We can only hope that the world has not lost itself so much to its vanities as to fail to acknowledge this study for the remarkable intellectual achievement and call to conscience it is. -- Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, professor of history, Syracuse University
      The author provides a well-written, insightful survey of workplace alienation and the loss of craft; the ironies of identity claims, multiculturalism, and 'managed diversity;' and the crisis of the black intellectual, with special attention to Cornel West. Stiegerwald's insistence that analysis by grounded in attention to actual existing conditions continues the discussion among leftist scholars about the direction of critical inquiry. . . . Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. -- G.M. Massey, University of Wyoming * CHOICE *

      Table of Contents
      Preface: The Follies of Cultural Determinism in an Age of Anti-Culture Chapter 1: On the Rise of Cultural Determinism in an Age of Anti-Culture Chapter 2: The Misappropriation of Culture in the Contemporary Mind Chapter 3: Work and Culture Chapter 4: Culture and Identity Chapter 5: Race and Culture Chapter 6: How the Left Got Cultured Chapter 7: The Virtues of Cosmopolitanism, Complexity, and Taste

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