Dr Liza Das Associate Professor Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Definition “The domain of Cultural Studies covers the social processes involved in the production, transmission and reception of symbolic or cultural forms.” The Polity Reader In Cultural Theory Cultural Studies, inasmuch as it focuses on symbolic forms and signifying practices, is distinguished from what is called the study of culture. “Why is Agatha Christie not studied in English departments when most people read Christie rather than Thomas Hardy?” “Who decides that Shakespeare can / must be read but not Christie?” Pramod K. Nayar, An Introduction to Cultural Studies The Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (est. 1964) The University of Birmingham Richard Hoggart Stuart Hall • Cultural Studies has a commitment to an ethical evaluation of modern society and to a radical line of political action. • It has the objective of understanding culture in all its complex forms and of analysing the social and political contexts in which culture manifests itself. Culture Have you ever asked yourselves: Why do we live the kind of life that we live? In Cultural Studies this question is framed as “How are we produced as subjects?” What is culture? Why should we investigate culture? Can it be studied systematically? If yes, what are the tools with which we may approach such a vast subject? QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Here we study the life that we live -- and the reasons thereof -- through a variety of lenses, and all the various lenses may not agree with each other. Such is the difficulty of studying the lives that we live, our beliefs, our choices and our loves and our despairs. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stuart Hall By culture I mean the actual grounded terrain of practices, representations, languages and customs of any specific society. I also mean the contradictory forms of common sense which have taken root in and helped to shape popular life QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Culture That complex whole which includes knowledge, belief, art, law, morals, custom, and any other capabilities and habits acquired by man as a member of society. E. Tylor, Primitive Culture, 1871 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Culture is the webs of significance* spun by man that he is suspended in. C. Geertz, The Interpretation of Cultures, 1973 * or of meaning and value QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In how many different ways can you study yourself as a cultural being? Interdisciplinary scope: Philosophy: How do we understand reality? Kant: Noumenon and phenomenon. How do we attribute meaning to our existence through our value and belief systems? Language: How does language construct our perception of reality? Economics: How does wealth and distribution determine our lives? QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Sociology: Why do we have the social systems and arrangements that we do? Psychology: Why do we think in certain ways? What does it mean to be a cognitive agent? Science and Technology: How does technology affect our way of life? Literature, media: Why are the media and literature so powerful as cultural products? History: How has culture evolved and change thorough different times? QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Areas: 1. Science: Human Evolution and the beginnings of culture 2. Psychology: Theory of Memetics 3. Political Economy: Marxism 4. Modernism and Postmodernism 5. Technology: Posthuman culture QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Key concepts and guiding statements of the course: 1. Culture is not a given. It is constructed and hence can be studied systematically. 2. Culture is not absolute or static but changing and dynamic. 3. There are reasons and forces (eg. political economy) behind cultural changes. 4. Power is the chief arbiter of the kind of lives we lead. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Theory: considerations How do we theorise culture? Theory is an intellectual activity in which people interpret, critique and draw generalisations about how and why the social world spins the economic, cultural, political and institutional webs. Theory has the ability to make sense of all levels of our everyday lives. Cultural practices are always underlined by theoretical assumptions and perspectives. The theory constructed is not merely a system but an instrument for change. Practice: Not theory vs practice; theory as practice. Epistemology: Theory of knowledge, its origins, sources, assumptions and limits. How do we have knowledge and what are its means? Problematisation of knowledge QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 THEORY • A general idea that explains a large set of factual patterns. • A comprehensive explanation of a given set of data that has been repeatedly confirmed by observation and experimentation and has gained general acceptance within the academic community. • A statement or set of statements used to explain a phenomenon. A theory is generally accepted as valid due to having survived repeated testing. • A scientific theory is an established and experimentally verified fact or collection of facts about the world. Unlike the everyday use of the word theory, it is not an unproved idea, or just some theoretical speculation. The latter meaning of a 'theory' in science is called a hypothesis. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 •Several related propositions that explain some domain of inquiry. Also called a school or paradigm. •A statement or set of statements designed to explain a phenomenon or class of phenomena. For example, Social Learning Theory describes how human behavior is a product of environmental, social and personal factors. •An organized set of ideas that serves as a framework for interpreting facts and findings and a guide for research. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Theory and Practice Cultural Studies is a body of theory generated by thinkers who regard the production of theoretical knowledge as a political practice. Knowledge is never a neutral or objective phenomenon but a matter of positionality, of the place from which one speaks, to whom, and for what purposes. E.g., an anti-casteism theorist builds her discourse with a view to bringing about change in caste consciousness and actual caste practices. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Cultural Universals Communicating with a verbal language consisting of a limited set of sounds and grammatical rules for constructing sentences Using age and gender to classify people (e.g., teenager, senior citizen, woman, man) Classifying people based on marriage and descent relationships and having kinship terms to refer to them (e.g., wife, mother, uncle, cousin) Raising children in some sort of family setting QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Having a sexual division of labor (e.g., men's work versus women's work) • Having a concept of privacy • Having rules to regulate sexual behavior •Distinguishing between good and bad behavior QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Having some sort of body ornamentation • Making jokes and playing games • Having art • Having some sort of leadership roles for the implementation of community decisions QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 KEY FEATURES OF DARWIN’S THEORY Variation: There is Variation in Every Population. Competition: Organisms Compete for limited resources. Offspring: Organisms produce more Offspring than can survive. Genetics: Organisms pass Genetic traits on to their offspring. Natural Selection: Those organisms with the Most Beneficial Traits are more likely to Survive and Reproduce. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 VARIATION Darwin suggests that the source of variation is in "reproductive elements prior to conception“ Variation is random and heritable. Variation in domestic varieties is different than in wild populations. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 COMPETITION • The lack of resources to nourish the reproduced individuals places pressure on the size of the species population, and this means increased competition and as a consequence, some organisms do not survive. • The organisms who die as a consequence of this competition are not totally random, Darwin found that those organisms more suited to their environment were more likely to survive. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 OFFSPRING • One of the prime motives for all species is to reproduce and survive, passing on the genetic information of the species from generation to generation. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Differential reproduction- If an organism lives half as long as others of its species, but has twice as many offspring survive upto adulthood, its genes will become more common in the adult population of the next generation. • If the variations are inherited, then differential reproductive success will lead to a progressive evolution of particular populations of a species, and populations that evolve to be sufficiently different might eventually become different species. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 GENETICS • Genetics is the study of the function and behavior of genes. • Offspring receive a mixture of genetic information from both parents. This process contributes to the great variation of traits QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 DARWIN'S HYPOHTESIS ”…principle by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved” • If the variations are inherited, then differential reproductive success will lead to a progressive evolution of particular populations of a species, and populations that evolve to be sufficiently different might eventually become different species QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 DARWIN'S THEORY Darwin came to understand that any population consists of individuals that are all slightly different from one another, those individuals having a variation that gives them an advantage in staying alive long enough to successfully reproduce are the ones that pass on their traits more frequently to the next generation. Subsequently, their traits become more common and the population evolves. Darwin called this “descent with modification”. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 TELL-TALE SIGNS OF EVOLUTION Our emotional behavior follows the pattern that are already visible in lower animals. The curling of lips into a sneer maybe a relic of the snarling action designed to show the teeth to an enemy when the teeth were still used as weapons. Our lives are still dominated by functions imposed on us as a result of our animal ancestors. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Our moral sense is a product of interaction between social instincts and developing intelligence . in many ‘primitive’ tribes, the willingness to co-operate with each other is confined to the tribal group-outsiders don’t count as a moral universe. This is consistent with the view that the social instincts were built up for the benefit of the group. As the size of our societies have increased we have inevitably been learn to generalize the moral theories designed to convince us that respect for others is an absolute good. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Adaptation explains why our ancestors had evolved characters that separated them from apes. The apes have remained apes because they have retained their ancestor lifestyle in trees, their forelimbs have thus continued to be adapted for grasping branches. Our own ancestors moved out of the trees, stood upright as means of getting about in open plains. This in turn freed their hands for exploring the environment and for using sticks and stones as primitive tools. Therefore our intelligence is a byproduct of unique shift in lifestyle by our ancestors. In their new way of life, something called natural selection favored those individuals who walked upright and in turn promoted the increase of intelligence within a population that now had better opportunity to exploit that faculty. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 TYPES OF SELECTION 1.Natural selection 2.Man-made selection 3.Sexual selection it depends not on a struggle for existence, but on struggle between males for the possession of females. The result is not death to the unsuccessful competitor, but few or no offspring. Therefore it is less vigorous then natural selection. SEXUAL SELECTION Vs NATURAL SELECTION: MAN-MADE SELECTION Vs NATURAL SELECTION: N.S powers on all ages and both sexes. Man can act only on external and visible characters. Nature cares nothing for appearances, except in so far as they may be useful to any being. It can act on every internal organ, on every shade, on whole machinery of life. Man selects only for his own good, nature only for that of the being for which it tends. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 NATURAL SELECTION Daily and hourly scrutinising; throughout the world, every variation, even the slightest; rejecting that which is bad, preserving and adding up all that is good ; silently and insensibly working, whenever and wherever opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being in relation to its organic and inorganic conditions of life. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Natural selection can act only by preservation and accumulation of infinitesimally small inherited modifications, each profitable to preserved being; and as modern geology has almost banished such views as the excavation of a great valley by a single diluvial wave, so will natural selection, if it be a true principle, banish the belief of continued creation of new organic beings, or of any great and sudden modifications in their structures. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY The purpose of evolutionary psychology is to identify evolved emotional and cognitive adaptations that represent "human psychological nature. " Evolutionary Psychology is not a single theory but a large set of hypotheses" and a term which "has also come to refer to a particular way of applying evolutionary theory to the mind, with an emphasis on adaptation, gene-level selection, and modularity.” - Steven Pinker QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Evolutionary Psychology Evolutionary psychology borrows particular themes from evolutionary biology (outlined above), and adds these fundamental assumptions: Existence of discrete psychological traits: Psychological aspects of humans (e.g. "spatial ability", "anxiety levels") are discrete traits, Heritability of psychological traits: These traits have a genetic basis, they are inherited, and at some point in the evolutionary past have been components of genetic variation, Adaptation: These traits have been exposed to selection, and currently represent adaptations to some previous environment. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Principles of evolutionary psychology Evolutionary psychology is a hybrid discipline that draws insights from modern evolutionary theory, biology, cognitive psychology, anthropology, economics, Computer science, and paleoarchaeology. Premises: 1) Manifest behavior depends on underlying psychological mechanisms, information processing devices housed in the brain, in conjunction with the external and internal inputs that trigger their activation. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 1) Evolution by selection is the only known causal process capable of creating such complex organic mechanisms. 2) Evolved psychological mechanisms are functionally specialized to solve adaptive problems that recurred for humans over deep evolutionary time. 3) Selection designed the information processing of many evolved psychological mechanisms to be adaptively influenced by specific classes of information from the environment. 4) Human psychology consists of a large number of functionally specialized evolved mechanisms, each sensitive to particular forms of contextual input, that get combined, coordinated, and integrated with each other to produce manifest behavior. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Culture and evolutionary psychology The mind is a system of neuro-cognitive information processing modules designed by natural selection to solve the adaptive problems of our distant ancestors. The diversity of forms that human cultures take are constrained by innate information processing mechanisms underlying our behavior. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Language acquisition modules Incest avoidance mechanisms Cheater detection mechanisms Intelligence and sex-specific mating preferences Foraging mechanisms Alliance-tracking mechanisms Agent detection mechanisms Fear and protection mechanisms (survival mechanisms) These mechanisms are theorized to be the psychological foundations of culture. In order to fully understand culture we must understand its biological conditions of possibility. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • There was a rapid increase in size of brain during the various evolutionary stages • The rapid increase in cerebral volume was concentrated mainly in the association cortex( dealing with complex calculations), hippocampus (dealing with memory) and cerebellum (dealing with posture and balance). QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Another significant change was a second expansion of the brain and the descent of the larynx in the wind pipe. • An important event was the evolution of laryngeal nerves which connects the brain to the larynx and allows us to speak. This feature is also found in some reptiles and amphibians but is vestigial in them. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • One of the main differences between the apes and our ancestors was that the memory of apes was episodic. •While our ancestors, on the other hand, could retrieve their memories as and when they wanted. •This meant that our ancestors had access to wide repertoire of memories which allowed them to remember the body representations of various activities and hence in turn allowing them to perfect them and even improvise on them. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • As the whole body became a tool for communication new social territories began opening up: complex games, extended competition, pedagogy through direct imitation, a more complex repertoire of facial expressions and intentional group displays of aggression, solidarity, joy, fear and sorrow forming the basis of the first hominid QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • The social, cultural, anatomical changes surrounding the hominids paved the way for lexicon invention. • The language was an offshoot of the lexicon invention which enabled our ancestors to enable relationship between words and the imposition of metalinguistic skills the govern the uses of these words QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Language gradually assumed a dominant and an important role the human culture but never eliminating the mimetic skills learned earlier on. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • This resulted in the well known phrase “survival of the fittest”, where the organisms most suited to their environment had more chance of survival if the species falls upon hard times. • Those organisms who are better suited to their environment exhibit desirable characteristics, which is a consequence of their genome being more suitable to begin with. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 ANATOMICAL IMPLICATIONS OF DARWIN’S THEORY Right Handedness QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Bipedalism RIGHT HAND SPECIFICITY IN HIGHER HOMINIDS Handedness is an attribute of human beings defined by their unequal distribution of fine motor skill between the left and right hands QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 HANDEDNESS Most humans (say 70 percent to 95 percent) are righthanded, a minority (say 5 percent to 30 percent) are left-handed, This appears to be universally true for all human populations anywhere in the world. There is evidence for genetic influence for handedness although it can be influenced (and changed) by social and cultural mechanisms. - It is not unusual for individual animals to show a preferential use of one hand over the other, to develop an individual hand preference. But there is no consensus among researchers that any non-human species shows the same species-level handedness found in humans. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 HANDEDNESS What is the cause of handedness and why the handedness is majorly dominant in humans and Not animals as such…? QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Experiment • US university scientists were able to synthesize a drug that could generate similar dillusional environment that existed in the times when major anatomical transformations were occuring among previous hominids . •When this drug was administered to apes it was found that those showed greater endurance to that drug that had greater right hand specificity. • Thus experiment revealed that right handedness gradually grew during the phase of evolution of prehominids into later developed hominids representing this property grew as a result of cultural and anatomical human development which is now visible in existence of species level handedness in humans QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 ORIGIN OF BIPEDALISM As the successive homonids generations were advancing in cultural and neural fields it demanded more efficient energy management, therefore bipedalism was one the most significant anatomical transformations of the era. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Anthropologists theorized that early humans began walking on two legs as a way to reduce locomotor energy costs. • To examine this theory among humans and adult chimpanzees, researchers have found that human walking is around 75 percent less costly, in terms of energy and caloric expenditure, than quadrupedal knucklewalking in chimpanzees. • That energy savings could have provided early hominids with an evolutionary advantage over other apes by reducing the cost of foraging for QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 food. •The thermoregulatory model (Wheeler Labs) views the increased heat loss, increased cooling, reduced heat gain and reduced water requirements conferred by a bipedal stance in a hot, tropical climate as the selective pressure leading to bipedalism. • Sleeping on back is possible anatomically only in bipedals and research shows sleeping on back is least expensive way as far as energy is concerned. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT AND INHERITANCE over the period of evolution,the humans which were once a mere food gatherers and hunters have evolved not only anatomically but also culturally as well as technologically. This vast sea of knowledge which has been accumulated over the period of time is not just a 1 generation process but gradually developed as the fruits of inheritance. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 INHERITANCE • This property of passing on valued knowledge as well as skills to the successors called inheritance which has ultimately played important role in the development of human culture as we see today. • As humans developed anatomically majorly in the neural area, the basic human efforts became more and more thoughtful as the thinking processes had begun • The era of language development dawned upon and soon man was making long strides in the cultural expansion and knowledge. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • Humans started resorting to external memories to better organise the complex structure of their lives which is evident in the large number engravings ,ancient texts, and sculptures. • This era marked not only the acquisition of knowledge but also their preservation which could be rightfully transferrred to next generations which further developed and consolidated them . QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Marxism Karl Marx 1818-1883 Friedrich Engels 1820-1895 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Influences Hegel Feuerbach Max Stirner Moses Hess Lewis Morgan A mere property career is not the final destiny of mankind ... QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 A Basic Question… “Why do we live the kind of life that we live?” Marxism is a cultural theory which seeks to give a historical and materialist explanation for the kind of lives we live. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Metaphors of Understanding Society QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Functionalism “Society Is Like”: A Human Body Characteristics of human body… Characteristics of society… Each part of the body works in harmony with all other parts QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Each part of society works in harmony with all other parts Interactionism “Society Is Like”: A Play Characteristics of a play A play has actors who play their individual roles Characteristics of society Society consists of individual actors who play a variety of roles QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Post-Modernism “Society Is Like”: A Theme Park Characteristics of theme park A theme park has numerous different rides Characteristics of society Society is characterised by a multiplicity of choices (work, education, leisure, etc.) QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Idealism This school of thought looks upon nature and history as a reflection of ideas or spirit. The theory that men and women and every material thing was created by a divine Spirit, is a basic concept of idealism. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 History is explained as a history of thought. People's actions are seen as resulting from abstract thoughts, and not from their material needs. Hegel turned thoughts into an independent "Idea" existing outside of the brain and independent of the material world. The latter was merely a reflection of this Idea. Religion is part and parcel of philosophical idealism. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Hegelian Dialectics Marx a “Young Hegelian” Dialectics is the science of the general laws of motion and development of nature, human society and thought. Dialectics deals not only with facts, but with facts in their connection, i.e. processes, not only with isolated ideas, but with laws, not only with the particular, but with the general. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Dialectics "A development that seemingly repeats the stages already passed, but repeats them differently, on a higher basis a development, so to speak, in spirals, not in a straight line; a development by leaps, catastrophes, revolutions; breaks in continuity…” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 HEGEL Hegel’s dialectic is often characterized as a three step process of Thesis Antithesis Synthesis It is the way how one can explain formation of every society past and present. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Hegel “What experience and history teach is this – that nations and governments have never learned anything from history, or acted upon any lessons they might have drawn from it.” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Hegel brilliantly posed the problem, but was prevented from solving it by his idealist preconceptions. It was, in Engels' words "a colossal miscarriage". QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Dialectical Materialism Maintains that the material world is real and that nature or matter is primary. The mind or ideas are a product of the brain. The brain, and therefore ideas, arose at a certain stage in the development of living matter. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Marx explained, on the contrary, thoughts and ideas were simply the reflection of the material world. So Hegelian dialectics was fused with modern materialism to produce the higher understanding of dialectical materialism QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Marxist philosophy The driving force of history is neither "Great Men" nor the super-natural, but stems from the development of the productive forces (industry, science, technique, etc.) themselves. It is economics, in the last analysis, that determines the conditions of life, the habits and consciousness of human beings. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In all societies, the provision and social organisation of such things as food, clothing and shelter is a fundamental social necessity and it involves devising some means whereby such things are: Produced by a population. Distributed to people Exchanged in some way. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In addition, it is important to note that the production, distribution and exchange of such things as food and shelter is a communal activity people have to co-operate in some way to produce these things. In order to produce, therefore, people enter, willingly or unwillingly into a variety of social relationships. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Marx argued that, throughout human history, the way in which people "co-operated" - or organised themselves - to produce the "means of their social existence" has been different. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 "In the social production which men carry on, they Marx enter into definite relations that are indispensable and independent of their will; these relations of production correspond to a definite stage of development of their material powers of production. The sum total of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society - the real foundations, on which rise legal and political superstructures and to which correspond definite forms of social consciousness." QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Historical Materialism Men make their own history, but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly found, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as farce. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Practice To transform both the world and man’s consciousness of it To achieve the state of Communism: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 “Society" is not a something that exists over and above people. “Society" is the product of people's behaviour. If people create the social structures within which behaviour is ordered then, of course, they are perfectly capable of changing the social order QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The relationship between social classes is basically: Unequal Exploitative Founded on a conflict of interest QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 To expose the political and economic contradictions inherent in Capitalism (for example, the fact that while people co-operate to produce goods, a Capitalist class appropriates these goods for its private profit). QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 All exploiting classes attempt to morally justify their class rule by portraying them, as the highest, most natural form of social development, deliberately concealing the system of exploitation by disguising and distorting the truth. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Society / social systems are in a constant - inevitable - state of conflict. Social order exists not because it is: a. The "natural" state of things or, b. Because everyone is in basic agreement about how order should be maintained and so forth. But order exists because powerful social groups (or classes) are able to impose a sense of order, permanence and stability upon all other classes in society. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Therefore, those who dominate the economic sphere in any society will also dominate politically and ideologically - and, in this respect, an important idea is that the ideology of the ruling class is the dominant ideology in society. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Power The possession of power gives you: 1. Economic power Wealth Status. 2. Political power Control over political institutions (government, the State). 3. Ideological power Control over the way in which people are able to visualise and interpret the social world. This is carried-out through various forms of socialisation through the mass media, the workplace, the family, the education system QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 “The mode of production in material life determines the general character of the social, political, and intellectual processes of life.” “It is not the consciousness of men which determines their existence; it is on the contrary their social existence which determines their consciousness.” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Consciousness It is our socio-economic reality that gives shape to our way of thinking and not the other way around. The economic reality in which we find ourselves determines our culture and our consciousness. There is no absolute knowledge and at any given time, the ruling ideas are the ideas of the ruling CLASS. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Base and Superstructure Marx argued that these two basic types of social relationships represented two parts of the overall nature of relationships within capitalist society: 1. Economic relationships - the "infrastructure" or "economic base" of society. 2. Political / ideological relationships - the "superstructure" of society. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Although superstructural relationships are important, they ultimately rest upon the economic base of society. According to Marxists, these kinds of relationships are dependent upon - and reflect the nature of economic relationships in society. Thus, if economic relationships are fundamentally unequal, then political and ideological relationships will both reflect - and help to reinforce - inequality. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Superstructure Consciousness Religion Morality Education Family Mass Media Legal System Workplace Ethics Base Relations of Production Forces of Production QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Education For Marx education performs two main functions in capitalist society: 1. It reproduces the inequalities and social relations of production of Capitalist Society. 2. It serves to legitimate these inequalities under the guise of Meritocracy. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Revolutionary changes in society take place because the “the forces of production” come into conflict with the “relations of production” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Historical Materialism Primitive Communism – Based on cooperation Emergence of surplus and private property The historic defeat of women Slave Society Feudalism Absolute Monarchy Capitalist Revolution Competition Imperialism Socialism Communism – Cooperation QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 According to Marx, different historical periods have different dominant means of production (which, in turn, produces different types of society). In Feudal society, land was the most important means of production. In Capitalist society, land is still significant, but the most important means of production are things like factories, machines and so forth. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism Different societies at different times in their historical development involve some or all of the above as part of the general production process. For example, in Britain in the Middle Ages, the forces of production would have involved: Land - since this was basically an agricultural society. Raw materials - basically anything that could be grown... Tools - but not machines, as such. Knowledge - but not particularly "scientific" as we might understand the term. People - the "labour power" of peasants, for example, working on the land. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Capitalism The relationship to the means of production objectively determines our social class and, if we accept this idea for a moment, it follows that he initially identified two great classes in Capitalist society: 1. The Bourgeoisie (Upper or Ruling class). Those people (a minority) who owned the means of production. 2. The Proletariat (Lower or Working class). Those people (the majority) who did not own the means of production. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Marx argued that all societies involved conflict - sometimes open but more usually submerged beneath the surface of everyday life - that was based upon fundamental inequalities and different economic and political interests The history of all societies is the history of Class conflict QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The basis of this conflict lies in the fact that although wealth is created by the Proletariat (the working class), it is appropriated (that is "taken away") privately - by the Bourgeoisie - in the form of profits. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Class Society the proletariat (or working class) own nothing but their labour power the bourgeoisie (or capitalists) own the means of production The proletariat have no one beneath them to exploit so the only path they can take to freedom is to set up a classless society in which no one is exploited. This, they thought, would happen after a revolutionary overthrow of capitalism and after an in-between period called the "dictatorship of the proletariat". QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Bourgeoisie in any Capitalist society resolve it through somehow making the Proletariat believe that the economic system is based upon freedom, fairness and equality. This is where the concepts of both "power" and "ideology" come into the equation. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Consensual Values??? Though it appears that people in any society do share fundamental values, but Marx argued that this "consensus over basic values" (which Functionalists, for example, tend to take for granted) was by no means the whole story. In effect, Marx argued that the Bourgeoisie are able to use the power that comes from economic ownership to "control" the way in which people think about and "see" the nature of the social world. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Manufactured Consent Marxists see this consensus as being manufactured by the Bourgeoisie (through the primary and secondary socialisation process and cultural institutions such as religion, education and the mass media). QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Hegemony Leadership with the consent of the led There are two ways in which a ruling class can consolidate its hegemony over other classes: a. Through the use of force (the police and army, for example). Althusser called these "Repressive State Apparatus" (RSAs) b. Through the use of ideology / socialisation (the mass media, social workers, teachers and the like - a form of "soft policing") Althusser called these "Ideological State Apparatus" (ISAs) QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Alienation Alienation is used to refer to the way in which Capitalist society degrades both the Bourgeoisie and the Proletariat. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Bourgeoisie are alienated from their fellow human beings because of their exploitation and oppression of the rest of society. This condition of alienation is used to explain why such things as crime occurs in society - the social bonds that should tie people together are fatally weakened by the exploitative relationship between Capital and Labour. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Proletariat are alienated from society because although they are responsible for producing goods cooperatively (for the potential benefit of society as a whole), the fruits of their labour are appropriated by the Bourgeoisie (in the form of profit) for their private use. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is, to CHANGE it. Communism is a political philosophy which argues that men should have equal rights to wealth. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The first step in the revolution by the working class is to raise the proletariat to the position of ruling class to win the battle of democracy. The proletariat will use its political supremacy to wrest, by degree, all capital from the bourgeoisie, to centralize all instruments of production in the hands of the state, i.e., of the proletariat organized as the ruling class; and to increase the total productive forces as rapidly as possible. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Communist Manifesto Abolition of private property Abolition of all rights of inheritance. Equal obligation of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for agriculture. Free education for all children in public schools. Abolition of children's factory labor in its present form. Combination of education with industrial production QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In place of the old bourgeois society, with its classes and class antagonisms, we shall have an association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Capitalism effects the ideology of people as it: Destroys important human values, replacing even religious belief with naked exploitation. Undermines an individual’s sense of personal value in one’s work. Undermines human relationships; all relationships are based on cash. Destroys human freedom. The only freedom it protects is free trade. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 From Communist Manifesto “The bourgeoisie … has created enormous cities, has greatly increased the urban population as compared with the rural, and has thus rescued a considerable part of the population from the idiocy of rural life…. The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together… railways, electric telegraphs, clearing of whole continents for cultivation, canalization of rivers.” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Factors responsible for the fall of imperialism Capitalism creates huge factories, workers become concentrated and begin to organize for legal reforms (higher wages/better working conditions). Their effort fails. Fierce competition between capitalists leads to new technologies, which leads to lower costs. In the competition, some capitalists go bankrupt & have to become workers, and many workers lose their jobs as new technology replaces them QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Greater numbers of people permanently unemployed. Misery widespread. Fewer people can afford the products of capitalists, so fewer companies survive. The proletariat, having nothing to lose but their chains, so they rise up. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Vision of the Socialists Socialist Revolution will eliminate private property. No longer will man have the means of exploiting another man. Bourgeoisie will fight, so revolution will be violent. A dictatorship of the proletariat will follow to weed out remaining capitalist elements. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In the end, a classless society with no more oppression or internal contradictions. People will be free to choose how they labor, and can be creatively productive. They will be able to live to their fullest potential. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Its description in Marx’s Communist Manifesto in 1845: “In communist society, …nobody has one exclusive sphere of activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes,… to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticize after dinner, … without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, herdsman or critic.” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Socio-economic Conditions that favored rise of socialism : The increase in the number of workers in the industrializing nations was one important factor. The concentration of industries during the socalled second industrial revolution that occurred during the last two decades of the nineteenth century brought together workers in unprecedented numbers. Rapid industrialization also accelerated the tendency of the general population to move from the countryside into urban centers. Cities proved to be favorable environments for socialist organizations—which demanded a fairly sophisticated social/cultural infrastructure in order to thrive. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The rise of literacy also redounded to the benefit of the socialists: as more and more workers learned to read they were able to imbibe socialist ideas in the form of pamphlets, books, and the press. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The "democratization" of the ballot box also helped the socialists in that the extension of the franchise brought more workers into the political arena thus making it possible to get socialist deputies elected to parliament. All of these factors created the basis for a "proletarian" mentality or consciousness. By the late 1880s workers were joining clubs and trade unions, electing their own representatives, and subscribing to their own publications. And though this is not to say that all workers were necessarily socialist, it did mean that the principal vehicles for propagating and sustaining socialism were now anchored in the framework of modern industrial society. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Paris Commune The prevalent socio-economic conditions and the postwar conditions made the working class restless and on March 18th 1871 , a socialist form of government called the “Paris Commune” took over Paris and denied subjugation to France Imperialist government . But was brutally suppressed by the Capitalist regime in about 2 months. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Destruction of the Vendôme Colonne during the Paris Commune. A barricade in the Paris Commune, March 18, 1871 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 SOCIALISM Socialism refers to a broad array of doctrines or political movements that visualize a socioeconomic system in which property and the distribution of wealth are subject to control by the community for the purposes of increasing social and economic equality and cooperation. This control may be either direct—exercised through popular collectives such as workers' councils — or indirect—exercised on behalf of the people by the state. As an economic system , socialism is often characterized by socialized (state or community) ownership of the means of production . QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In a socialist society the means of producing and distributing wealth—factories, farms, mines, docks, offices, transport—will belong to the whole community. Common ownership will do away with the need for exchange, so that money will have no use. Production in socialism will be determined by people on the basis of social need, not profit. At the moment people may need wealth but, unless they can afford to buy it, they must go without. Production is geared to sale with a view to profit. Socialism means production solely for use: bread to eat, houses to live in, clothes to wear. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 What will be the incentive to work in a socialist society? There will be no wages, for in a classless society no person will have the right to buy another person's ability to work for a price. Work in socialist society will depend on cooperation and the voluntary decisions of men and women to contribute to society in order to keep it going. Just as an individual could not survive if he or she did not eat, drink or take basic health care, so a socialist society would not survive unless the people in it acted cooperatively in a spirit of mutuality. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 One basic question : why should those who provide the money (capital) receive all the profits, and those who provide the labor receive none of the profits? It is labor, after all, that turns raw materials (including cash) into something with greater value. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Socialism could be summed up in this way: “All social wealth, the land with all its natural resources hidden in its bowels and on the surface, and all factories and works must be taken out of the hands of the exploiters and taken into common property of the people. The first duty of a real workers' government is to declare by means of a series of decrees the most important means of production to be national property and place them under the control of society.” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 An explanation of Socialism… In other words, the resources should be in the hands of the workforce, not the few rich people there are. The true duty of the government is to place the ‘national property’ under the control of the “common” person. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 LENIN Engels The Great Socialists Robert Owen QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 LABOUR Labour begins with the making of tools. With these tools, humans change their surrounding to meet their needs. The essential distinction between Man and other animals : "The animal merely uses its environment," says Engels, "and brings about changes in it simply by his presence; Man by his changes makes it serve his ends, masters it. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stone Age : Nomadic Life Humans, were very rare animals, and they roamed around in groups in search of food. This nomadic life was completely dominated with food gathering. Everything that was made, collected, or produced was considered common property. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Barbarism Between 10,000 and 12,000 years ago, a new higher period emerged known as the new stone age or Barbarism. Instead of roaming for food, advances were made in cultivating crops and domesticating animals. Stable tribes and communities arose at this time. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 MATRIARCHAL Society In the stage of primitive communism (savagery and barbarism) no private property, classes, privileged elites, police or special coercive apparatus (the state) existed. The tribes were divided into social units called clans or gentes (singular gens). These were very large family groups, which traced their descent from the female line alone. It was forbidden for a man to cohabit with a woman from his own clan or gens, thus the tribes were made up from a coalition of clans. At certain times, a form of group marriage existed between the clans themselves. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The PATRIARCHAL Society Common tribal property came under growing strain from the development with the private family, with private houses growing up alongside the communal dwellings. Common Land became later divided up to form the collective property of each family. The Matriarchal family gave way to the Patriarchal (male dominated) form, which became essential to the maintenance of the collective property. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Ownership of Private Propery With the growth of new means of production, particularly in agriculture, the question arose “who should own them”? With the further development of the productive forces, inequality began to appear within society. For the first time, men and women were able to produce a surplus above and beyond his own needs, resulting in a revolutionary leap forward for humanity. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Build Up to the Slave Society In the past, where war broke out between two tribes, it was uneconomic to take captives as slaves. After all, a captive would only have been able to produce sufficient food for himself. No surplus was produced. The only use for a captive, given the shortage of food, was as a source of meat. This was the economic foundation of cannibalism. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Build Up But once a surplus was produced, it became economically viable to keep a slave who was forced to work for his master. The surplus obtained from a growing number of slaves was then appropriated by the new class of slave owners. Problem : How were the slaves to be controlled and forced to work? The old tribes had no police force or means of coercion. Solution : Every individual was free and was a warrior. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Society Divides The production of a surplus product smashed the old forms of society, enabling classes to crystallise. Rich and poor, landowner and tenant, creditor and debtor all made their appearance in society. The clans which were social units of originally blood relations, began to disintegrate. The rich of different clans had more in common with each other than they had with the poor of their own clan. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Shift in the Role For the first time since humans evolved from the ape, a section of society was freed from the labour of eking out an existence Those who were freed from work could now devote their time to science, philosophy and culture. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Shift in the Role With the growth of the city-states, the increase in the division of labour greatly accelerated new crafts sprung up together with a growing band of artists catering for the tastes and culture of the upper class Function of the new ruling class was to develop the productive forces and take society forward. It was at this stage that civilisation first emerged QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Rise of Feudalism 850-1000 AD QIP Cell Project A New Type of CD Government ForIIT a New Situation Guwahati 2009-10 Origin of Feudalism Roman Empire outstretched itself to increase the slave population though continuous wars. As a result many peasants – “The best soldiers” died bringing the cheap slave and the slave empires to an end. The Great Migrations, the flooding of the Roman Empire by the swarms of savage Germans, The conquest of The Barbarians marked the end of a civilization. They were uncivilized European tribes who had no respect for art and education. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Rise of Feudalism Barbarians destroyed productive forces: agriculture, industry and trade. The rural and urban population had decreased. In their conquest of territories they proceeded to ransack the towns and settle down in the countryside. There they lived by means of primitive agriculture. The need for social security, political order and economic growth gave rise to Feudalism QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism Etymology: The term "feudalism" came from the German fief. "Fief" simply meant "something of value." In the agricultural world of the time, "something of value" was usually land. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Definitions of Feudalism Feudalism was the system of loyalties and protections during the Middle Ages. Feudalism is a political system of power dispersed and balanced between king and nobles. Feudalism is a decentralized organization that arises when central authority cannot perform its functions and when it cannot prevent the rise of local powers. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism - in its primitive form During the Middle Ages, peasants could no longer count on the Roman army to protect them. German, Viking and Magyar tribes overran homes and farms throughout Europe. The peasants turned to the landowners, often called lords, to protect them. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism - in its primitive form The barbarians hence formed small communities with elected village chiefs. Gradually, the chiefs were chosen from the same family through succession. Villages were at constant war resulting in conquered land being divided up with the greater share to the chief. The chief guaranteed protection to those under him, in turn the villagers owed fidelity and homage to the lord. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Crystallization of Feudal Relations The authority of the village lords extended into the surrounding countryside. The lords or barons and their men-atarms formed a new social hierarchy sustained by labour provided by their vassals. The barons carried out continual warfare among themselves in order to enlarge their territories. The vanquished became vassals of the conqueror. Stronger Barons won and became potent feudatories and established feudal courts which petty barons in vassalage were bound to attend. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Lords/Barons + Men at arms Villagers/Vassals This was the hierarchy Maturity in Feudal Relations Majority of farmland became divided into areas known as manors, each manor possessing its own lord/Baron and officials. The arable land was divided into two parts, about a third belonged to the lord, while the rest divided amongst his vassals. The vassals share of land was further divided up into separate strips scattered throughout the fields which meant a massive drain on productivity. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Maturity in Feudal Relations The social structure that developed under feudalism gave rise to new classes and groups. The social framework represented a pyramid structure headed by the king, aristocracy, the great church men and bishops. Under the privileged were barons, dukes, counts & knights. On the bottom rungs of social order were freeman, serfs and slaves. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal Hierarchy QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal Hierarchy Role of the King The King was in complete control under the Feudal System. He owned all the land in the country and decided who he would lease land to. Role of the Baron The men who leased land from the King were known as Barons, they were wealthy, powerful and had complete control of the land they leased from the King. They established their own system of justice. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal Hierarchy Role of the Knights Knights were given land by a Baron in return for military service when demanded by the King. They had to protect the Baron and his family, as well as the Manor, from attack. The Knights kept as much of the land as they wished for their own personal use and distributed the rest to villeins(serfs). Although not as rich as Barons, Knights were quite wealthy QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal Hierarchy Role of the Serfs/Vassals/Peasants First kind: Borders, Cotters, Villeins • Serfs were given land by Knights. • Serfs were bound to the land. • They had to provide the Knight with free labour, food & service whenever demanded. • They had no rights and had to pay taxes to the king. • They were poor. • They were not allowed to leave the Manor and had to ask their lords permission even for marrying. • Serfs would often have to work three or four days a week for the lord as rent. They would spend the rest of their week growing crops to feed their families. • Life for a serf was not much better than the life of a slave. The only difference was that a serf could not be sold to another manor. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal Hierarchy Role of the Serfs/Vassals/Peasants Second kind: Other serfs worked as Sharecroppers. A sharecropper would be required to turn over most of what he grew in order to be able to live on the land. Third kind: Freemen Other kind of serfs were free. They owned the lands they worked on and did not have to pay for them. Fourth kind: Slaves •They could be sold to other manors. •They owned nothing. •They owed nothing to the king unlike the serfs who were the tenants. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudal System Unlike today, where the main body of wealth is created in the factories, “the land” produced almost all of the social requirement. The more land one held the more powerful one became. The ruling class rued by their virtual monopoly of land to which the serfs were tied. The lord’s needs came first. This new organization of society based on landed property gave rise to a further development of the productive forces. This time the surplus value created by the serf’s labor was appropriated by the Aristocratic lay and ecclesiastical ruling class. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 New Crystallization in the Feudal System The church became more and more powerful. Pope became more powerful thank the king or emperor with church lands extending to between a third and a half of the land in Christendom. The new morality and ideology that arose from these forms made the church more and more important. Feudalism was a total socio-economic political system based upon land ownership or control QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism - Socially Headed by Absolute Church Courts Cathedral building Patriarchal Society Closed caste system QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism Economically Largely Agrarian Generalization Closed Economy theory QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Feudalism Politically Divine Right Monarchy Parliament • • • House of Lords Great Council Cabinet Military-subsystem of political • • • • King Great Nobles Lesser Nobles Freemen QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Rise of Absolute Monarchy In general the feudal state was weak until the rise of absolute monarchies in the 16th century The Baronial wars took place when the robber Barons built up power and prestige to attack the central monarchy. The struggle of central monarch to subdue the regions – was the characteristic feature of the period. These wars helped trade to develop to a higher level. •Trade was at low level •Land produced practically everything. •It was natural economy geared towards self sufficiency. Before •New needs aroused due to crusades. •Merchants sold at high prices •This merchant arouse clashed with the traditional standards and restrictions of the feudal society QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 •Trade was at low level •Land produced practically everything. •It was natural economy geared towards self sufficiency. Before •New needs aroused due to crusades. •Merchants sold at high prices •This merchant arouse clashed with the traditional standards and restrictions of the feudal society This lead to the decline of Feudalism QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Decline of Feudalism Factors: Crusades Plagues Increased trade Capitalism Absolute Monarchy St. Thomas Aquinas QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Decline of Feudalism The Black Death: • • Killed at least 1/3 of Europe’s population Caused huge social upheaval! QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Decline of Feudalism The Black Death: It occurred in the mid 14th century. Killed at least 1/3 of Europe’s population • Caused huge social upheaval! • The Great Plague also occurred at the same time. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Transformations due to Trade As trade grew, a new class of rich merchants developed Growth of towns The merchant class that arose clashed with the traditional standards and restrictions of feudalism Towns began to demand their freedom and independence Gradually, town charters were conceded , by agreement or by force QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Transformations due to Trade • No longer was the land the soul source of power and privilege , as money acquired in trading assumed much greater importance. Small scale individual production was controlled and regulated through guild system With further division of labour, Craft guilds were established comprising- master, apprentices and journeymen QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Transformations due to Trade As more & more wealth accumulated, guild masters came into conflict with journeymen, & hence unions were created The rigid feudal system started losing its hold on the society, as trade flourished across and beyond Europe Money economy was introduced QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Decline of Feudalism Other Factors: The Peasants Revolt - Peasants realised their worth and demanded changes. Charters were granted but ignored by nobles Peasants moved away from the country into towns they were eventually allowed to buy their freedom Land was rented and the rights of lords over labour decreased The Feudal Levy was unpopular and as time went by Nobles preferred to pay the King rather than to fight and raise troops A centralised government was established QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Under feudalism the King was answerable to the Pope. At the end of the Middle Ages King Henry VIII clashed with the Pope and England subsequently broke with the Catholic church of Rome and the power of the Pope. This led to the establishment of the Church of England and the Dissolution of the Monasteries. It was the final 'nail in the coffin' of the Medieval Feudal System, feudalism, in England. Thus the conclusion of a dying civilization and the formation of the basis for a new upswing of civilization. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The capitalism came into existence by revolution, in which the "bourgeoise" class displaced the land-lord class as the economically dominant class, with or against the national monarchs as the case might be. These capitalist revolutions began roughly in the 1600's, and in some parts of the world, they continue today. As Marx and Engels observed, this new capitalist system has often been very dynamic, increasing the productivity of labor at QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 unprecedented rates. Yet the two most characteristic feature of capitalism have also been sources of tension that sometimes seemed destined to replace capitalism with some other system, either gradually or in a further revolution. One of those features is the new division of society into two classes: employers and employees, or, in Marxist terms, capitalists and workers or "proletarians." The other is the key role of the national state, which has sometimes been the rival of the capitalist employer class as the directing force in the economy. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The most immediate way in which the Reformation(especially of calvinist variety) aided the capitalist was by removing the stigma which the Catholic church had traditionally attached to money-lending. Calvinism positively encouraged the purposeful investment of money, by presenting luxury and self-indulgence as vices and thrift as a virtue. It even subtly contrives to suggest that wealth may itself be a sign of virtue. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 •Capitalism started to emerge during the 17th Century. At first the merchants, or “buyer uppers”, as they became known, were a link between the consumer and producer. However, gradually, they began to dominate the latter, first by placing orders and paying in advance, then by supplying the raw materials, and paying a wage for the work done in producing finished •goods. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The concept of a waged worker signalled a crucial stage in the development of capitalism. Its introduction was the final stage in the “buyer uppers” transition from merchant, (making money from trade), to capitalist (deriving wealth from the ownership and control of the means of production). The first stage of capitalism had come into being. This stage saw one new class, the primitive capitalists, exerting power over another new class, the waged workers. Early capitalism also engendered new methods of production. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The earliest was the ‘cottage industry’, which saw individual homes become mini-factories, with production directed by the capitalist. The cottage industry model became so widespread in the woollen textile industry that it became a method of mass production. In turn, the wool trade became Britain’s most important industry by the end of the 17th Century. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 It began with a split in the ruling class viz. aristocracy and the parliament. The king and his ministers clashed over a scheme to avoid state bankruptcy, with the parliament. The parliament enjoyed a huge support among the masses which broke out into deadly riots. George Rude: The revolt of the nobility was a curtain raiser rather than a revolution. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Between 1789 and 1793 the old feudal regime and the aristocracy had been completely swept away. The regime was headed by the revolutionary political middle class the Jacobins supported by the plebeians(wage earners and small craftsmen). Political shift to right occurred in 1794 with the government of directory coming to power. The old order had been broken, but the new bourgeois property rights were conserved. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 By the early 1770s, the economic and social conditions were in place for the industrial revolution to explode on to the world’s economies. Powered by a number of new inventions, the primitive factory system was transformed, as machine power drove productivity to unprecedented levels. With the factories transformed by the new machinery, the cottage industries could not possibly compete and soon collapsed. Between the 1770s and the 1830s, there was a boom in factory production with all manner of buildings being converted into factories and the majority of waged labor taking place within factory buildings. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 It is important to note that ownership of the ‘means of production’ at this stage in the development of industrial capitalism meant not only the ownership of factories, machinery and the power to invest or withhold capital, but also the means of the production of knowledge. Capitalists who owned newspapers, for example, could exert great political influence to protect their own interests. Ownership of a newspaper meant not only the direct control of print workers, distributors and sellers, but control over the transmission of information. This could, for instance, extend to direct or indirect political influence through specific politicians or parties. It might also extend and protect capitalist interests by the spread of ideology and, less subtly, blatant propaganda. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 1)The establishment of capitalism was a time of upheaval and bitter struggles between new and old power-brokers. 2)The mass of the population were dragged unwillingly into an increasingly violent conditioning process. 3)The new capitalists needed to be able to exert ever more pressure on their producers to produce more for less, so that the capitalists could maintain trading prices and increase profits. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 4)They looked to the state to ensure pressure was brought to bear on workers who, for the first time, were being forced to sell their labor in an increasingly competitive work environment, which was itself aggravated by the swollen ranks of the new landless an unemployed. 5)Laws were passed setting a rate for the maximum wage payable to peasants. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 6)The aim of all this brutal legislation was to turn the dispossessed into a disciplined obedient class of wage workers who, for a pittance, would offer up their labor to the new capitalism. 7) The problem of creating a disciplined and regimented workforce should not be underestimated. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Capitalists and state bureaucrats copied the ‘success’ of industrialization across the western world, as they sought to cash in on the huge wealth enjoyed by the new British ruling class. The capitalist system, based on the exploitation of the working class, soon spread to Europe, and as we will see, to the rest of the world. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Presently, capitalism, alongside its essential partner institutions of sexism, racism and homophobia, dominates the global economy, continuing to inform and maintain the social relations within it. The nowfamiliar pattern of economic success being measured by which country or capitalist can extract the most profit from the workers under their control has its origins in the transition of Britain from a feudal society. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Posthumanism QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Science will never achieve its aim of comprehending the ultimate nature of reality. The universe will always be more complex than we will ever know. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Posthumanism abandons the search for the ultimate nature of the universe and its origin. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The post human realises that the ultimate questions about existence and being do not require answers. The answer to the question “why are we here?” is that there is no answer. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 To know the ultimate nature of the universe would require knowing everything about universe, everything that has happened and everything that will happen. if one thing were not known it would imply that all knowledge of the universe is partial, potentially incomplete and therefore not ultimate. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 No scientific model will ever be complete, but will always be partial and contingent. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The post human accepts that humans have a finite capacity to understand and control nature. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Logic that seems consistent at the human scale cannot necessarily be applied to microcosmic or the macrocosmic scale. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 All origins are ends and all ends are origins QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Our knowledge about the universe is constrained by the level of resolution with which we are able to view it. Knowledge is contingent on data---data varies with resolution. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Nature is neither essentially ordered or disordered. The appearance of order or disorder implies more about the way in which we process the information than the intrinsic presence of order or disorder in nature. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Science work on the basis of intrinsic universal order but posthumanism accepts that laws are not things that are intrinsic to nature, nor are they things which arise purely in mind and are imposed on nature; as this would reinforce the division between the mind and reality which has already been abandoned. The order as well as disorder that is perceived around us is not a function exclusively of either the universe or our consciousness, but a combination of both as they cannot really be separated. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Everything that exists anywhere is energy. It manifests in infinite variety of ways. It perpetually transforms itself. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The appearance of matter is an illusion generated by interactions among energetic systems at the human level of resolution. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Humans and the environment are different expressions of energy; the only difference between them is the form that energy takes. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The post human is entirely open to ideas of ‘paranormality’, ‘immateriality’, the ‘supernatural’, and the ‘occult’. The posthuman does not accept that the faith in scientific method is superior to faith in other belief systems. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Statements on uncertainty QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The humanist era was characterized by certainty about the operation of the universe and the place of humans within it. The posthuman era is characterized by uncertainty about the operation of the universe and about what is to be human. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 • The Posthuman era , the age of uncertainty , was born in the period leading up to first world war since it was the time the quantum mechanics and cubism were developed. “…There are no things, just probabilities…” --Heisenberg QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Definition of Cyborgs A cyborg is a cybernetic organism, a hybrid machine and organism, a creature of social reality as well as a creature of fiction. A Cyborg adds to or enhances its abilities by using technology and it combines the natural and the artificial into one form. Term coined by Manfred E. Clynes and Nathan S. Kline in 1960 to describe a lab rat with an osmotic pump programmed to dispense chemicals QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Cyborgs as we imagine them…A complete cyborg in a popular anime series.. ghost in the shell… QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Fictional cyborgs are frequently portrayed with a fine granularity mixture of organic and mechanical (synthetic) parts, such as the BORG in the Star Trek franchise BORG in Star Trek QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 From one perspective, a cyborg world is about the final imposition of a grid of control on the planet, about the final abstraction embodied in a Star Wars apocalypse waged in the name of defense, about the final appropriation of women’s bodies in a masculinity orgy of war QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 From another perspective, a cyborg world might be about lived social and bodily realities in which people are not afraid of their joint kinship with animals and machines, not afraid of permanently partial identities and contradictory standpoints. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 A Cyborg in the real world QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Subjectivity as a Cyborg MEANING OF SUBJECTIVITY It is a condition of being a person and process by which we become a person. How we are constituted as subjects both biologically and culturally and how do we experience ourselves SUBJECTIVITY AS A CYBORG It basically means posing the question “what is a Cyborg?” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Identity in the Cybernetic age These days we are very busy construction something called a technological Imaginary. Now this imaginary is driven by the exciting probability of mastery of human beings over all the physical, sociological and moral constraints that define our cultural lives. Identities thus become recomposable, self-designed in a mix and match fashion, i.e. the constraints of the real world and the fleshy body are overcome in the artificial domain The excitement of virtual existence comes from the sense of release and liberation from the material world. In a world spoiled over-development, overpopulation and environmental poisons, it is comforting for the human mind to think that it can exist in cyber space untouched by by these physical decays and corruption So basically, the cybernetics age marks the end of identity QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Who/What is a Cyborg? do you wear a prosthesis? e.g., do you wear contact lenses or eyeglasses? do you take any medications? have you ever had an immunization? do you depend upon any form of technology for transportation? how would your life be affected if the power grid was shut off permanently? do you ever eat food or drink water that has been processed? in short, how intimately tied are you to technology? QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 If your answer to any of the above questions is YES Then you are a cyborg……… This is the broadest possible definition of a Cyborg QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Bio-medical Cyborgs Cyborg technologies used to replace lost or impaired biological functions Pacemakers Artificial hips and other joints Prosthetic limbs Cochlear implants Artificial skin and other organs ‘The elderly in society are becoming the first cyborgs’ QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Bio-medical Cyborgs humans/animals born as a result of reproductive technologies including genetic engineering pharmacological cyborgs - drugs used to optimise or enhance normal biological functions eg. sports medicine Cosmetic surgery QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Examples of Cyborgs Cyborg technologies used to amplify and extend human capacities For example, the kinds of melding of machine and human that we see in VR technologies (eg fighter pilot training) Telepresence technologies QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The Cyborg and the Post human Cyborg discourses are linked with the concept of the posthuman. Our cyborg technologies are giving us the capacity to intervene in our own evolution both through technological augmentation and genetic engineering. The re-design of the human is leading us into the realms of the posthuman and its associated unstable boundaries and shifting identities. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 What theorists say Marshall McLuhan "All media are extensions of some human faculty - physic or physical.” McHugh (quoted in Gray reading) "Soon perhaps, it will be impossible to tell where human ends and machines begin." Donna Haraway "We are all cyborgs." Figuratively, we are "living through a movement from an organic, industrial society to [society as] an ...information system". [i.e. humans are being re-crafted by biological and communications technologies.] QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Futurologist Alvin Toffler: “…soon, miniaturised computers "will not only be implanted to compensate for some physical defect but eventually will be implanted to enhance human capability. The line between human and computer at some point will become completely blurred.” N. Katherine Hayles According to Hayles we are moving from the human-machine hyphen where the human is connected to the machine, to the human/machine splice where the human and the machine extend into each other and there is no clearly distinguishable boundary between them QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Steve Mann Steve Mann has been working on wearable computing technologies since the 1970s Developed Wear Comp and Wear Cam technologies Worked at MIT from 1991. Now works at University of Toronto. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Kevin Warwick Kevin Warwick, Professor of Cybernetics at the University of Reading, UK, has implanted computer chips into his arm allowing him to communicate with a computer. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Cyborgs in art: Stelarc performance artist Stelarc has used technology in a variety of ways to amplify and extend his physical body “The Third Hand” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc It is no longer a matter of perpetuating the human species by reproduction but of enhancing the individual by redesigning. Male female intercourse is replaced by human machine interface...We are at the end of human physiology. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc “It is time the question whether a bipedal [two legged], breathing body with binocular vision and a 1400 cc brain us an adequate biological form. It cannot cope with the...information it has accumulated. The most significant planetary pressure is no longer the gravitational pull but the information thrust. Gravity has moulded the evolved body in shape and structure and contained it on the planet. Information [technology] propels the body beyond itself and its biosphere. Information fashions the form and function of the post evolutionary body” QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc ...altering the architecture of the body [allows it to be] amplified and accelerated, attaining planetary escape velocity. It becomes a post-evolutionary projectile. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc - Movatar QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc - Extra Ear QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Stelarc - Prosthetic Head QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 LOGIC Logic is an idealised self-referential system developed by human imagination. There are a few things that are less logical in behaviour than humans. There are a few things that work on only logic. eg: Machines. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 MACHINES Machines use logic. And they are restricted to using only logic. These machines will never display human charecteristics. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 As an example… Computers use logic. Currently the output of the computers is predictable. The posthuman era begins in full when the output of computers is unpredictable. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE. AI is the creation of synthetic persons and intelligences There were attempts to build synthetic humans and intelligence out of machines starting in the 17th century. The term A.I. was coined by Prof. John McCarthy, now at Stanford, in 1956. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Now A.I. seems to a dusty, meandering subject, with important milestones few and far between. A recent milestone was a chess computer that could beat that top chess master regularly in 1996. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Most artificial intelligence machines are hermetically sealed. They are limitted by the complexity of the calculations our machines can perform. They are only sensitive to a finite number of stimuli and the quotient of randomness intruding upon them is relatively small. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Human thought is not a hermetic linear system. Mind, body and environment cannot be separated. We cannot rule out the impact of any environmental stimuli on the thought process, no matter how minute it might be. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The mind receives a continuous input of random stimuli from the environment. It has evolved to absorb the unexpected-the discontinuous stimulus. The compulsion to assert order in the face of random stimuli contributes to our sence of being. This is absent in the case of synthetic beings. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Therefore if we are to create any synthetic intelligence that has a sence of being like that we recognize in ourselves, it must be sensitive to the same level of random interruption as humans. It must have a compulsion to reassert meaning in the face of both stable and unstable input. It should also be able to adapt to and take advantage of the creative possibilities offered by non-linear stimuli. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 SYNTHETIC INTELLIGENCE WITH CREATIVITY: If we wish to produce a synthetic intelligence that displays creativity, then we need to be able to establish connections between its thoughts in a discontinuous way. This will be achieved by making it perpetually sensitive to random stimuli. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 If we wish to produce a synthetic intelligence that displays aesthetic appreciation then it should be able to sense continuity and discontinuity simultaneously. This would cause excitement in the machine it is yet to be determined to what extent it would be pleasurable. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Technology has always been an integral part of mans conceptualization of the world. Yet previously technology has been finite in its ability to control itself. But now we have brought technology to a level where it can now be a synthetic mirror of a human being. Therefore it must be considered and worked into philosophical calculations. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The synthetic mirror does not only mean robots or clones or cyborgs - it also consists of the mirroring of basic acts that humans have done for centuries. Such as food-harvesting or growing… The taking away of such things frees man to do other things which have not been considered 'integral to life'. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Synthetic technology is steadily surpassing the importance of a single human being. Most philosophy has been based on the significance of 'a single human being' or 'the relationship between single human beings'. This will be based on the premise that man is now evolving past the Technological Age, and instead, is now moving to the Synthetic Age. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 This points to a necessary adjustment in philosophical thought, to consider not just the direct interplay between human beings, but, instead, to make it a three dimensional model involving: A single human - A single Human Synthetic Human (Technology). QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 STATEMENTS ON (DIS)ORDER & (DIS)CONTINUITY QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Meaning of order In this present perspective order means state of being carefully and neatly arranged Order and disorder are relative, not absolute, qualities. One cannot define disorder without order or vice versa QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The perception of order and disorder is something is contingent on the level of resolution from which it is viewed Creationists see structured beauty created by an intelligent designer. Scientists see the product of the natural forces QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 due to wind, turbulence and friction. Perception of order and disorder is often culturally determined for ex:religious conflicts arise due to this perception Logicians explain disorder in mathematical ways by using terms like entropy and complexity –ways independent of human subjectivity These definitions may be useful in certain applications but they remain open to relativistic interpretation QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 In Post-Human terms, the apparent distinctions between things are not the result of innate divisions within the structure of the Universe, but a product of: the way in which the sensual processes in living entities operate . the variety of ways in which energy is manifested in the universe. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Energy manifestations perceived by an observer can always be described with two simple qualities - continuity and discontinuity. Continuity is non-interruption of space-time. Discontinuity is a rupture in space-time. Both are experienced simultaneously Energetic states will appear as either continuous or discontinuous to an observer depending upon their viewing position. Both are understandable, recognizable in all events depending on how they are viewed QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The quality of discontinuity is context sensitive. Things are distinguished from each other due to perceived discontinuity which they display. The difference in manifestations of energy between things allows us to distinguish them The difference between a two elements is due to arrangement of atoms in them possessing different energies A human eye perceive different things due to difference of energy reception by retina QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Post human ideology of order and disorder There is no intrinsic differences between things an organism will perceive differences since energy is manifested in different ways and an organism is sensitive to different levels of energy. varying manifestations of energy can be perceived as either continuous or discontinuous, these qualities being entirely relative to each other. The existence of order or disorder is, therefore, a function of both the perceptual apparatus and the expression of energy. Order does not exist separately from its perception. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 The level of complexity in a system cannot be defined in objective (that is absolute) terms. Complexity is a function of Human cognition, not an intrinsic property of anything we might look at. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Questions arise in the post human era that would have not troubled us in the humanist era –what is a human? Is there such a thing ?how should we perceive it? Can we use different energy manifestations to describe the word human. This is what we have think in post human era where uncertainty creeps. QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10 Texts: 1. Chris Barker, Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice, Sage, 2003. 2. Andrew Edgar and Peter Sedgwick, eds, Key Concepts in Cultural Theory, Routledge, 2004. References: 1. P. Brooker, A Glossary of Cultural Theory, Arnold, 2000. 2. E. Hallman, ed, Cultural Encounters, Routledge, 2000. 3. M. G.Durham and D. M. Kellner, eds, Media and Cultural Studies: Key Works, Blackwell, 2001. Acknowledgments: Google images, wikipedia, All Students of HS 214, IIT Guwahati QIP CD Cell Project IIT Guwahati 2009-10