What's Become of Australian Cultural Studies?
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What's Become of Australian Cultural Studies?

The Legacies of Graeme Turner

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eBook - ePub

What's Become of Australian Cultural Studies?

The Legacies of Graeme Turner

About this book

Cultural studies face a complicated yet rich future, proving both flexible and resilient in many countries. Against this backdrop, this book offers a fresh perspective on the state of the field of cultural studies, via an evaluation of the work of one of its key thinkers – Graeme Turner – and the traditions of Australian cultural studies which have been influential on the formation of the field.

Thinking with Turner, and being informed by his practice, can help orient us in the face of new challenges and contexts across culture, media, and everyday life; teaching and pedagogy; the relation of research to the new politics of public engagement, policy, management, and universities; the internationalization of cultural studies and the reconfiguration of nationalism; the changing concepts and relations of culture; the development of important new areas in cultural studies, such as celebrity studies; and the emergence of digital media studies.

This lively and provocative volume is essential reading for anyone interested in where cultural studies has come from, where it's heading to, and what kinds of ideas – not least from Graeme Turner – will help scholars and students alike make sense of and reconfigure the discipline. This book was originally published as a special issue of Cultural Studies.

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Information

Publisher
Routledge
Year
2018
Print ISBN
9781138684881
eBook ISBN
9781134854165

Gerard Goggin, Anna Pertierra and Mark Andrejevic

WHAT’S BECOME OF AUSTRALIAN CULTURAL STUDIES

The legacies of Graeme Turner

This article introduces the special issue of Cultural Studies commemorating and evaluating the contribution of Graeme Turner to the field. This article provides a brief introduction to Turner, his key ideas and what resources they offer for cultural studies today and into the future. In particular, we suggest that Turner’s work and legacies needs are bound up with the trajectories of Australian cultural studies – and its place and circulation in international cultural studies.
Cultural studies scholars find themselves in an extremely interesting and complicated moment. Displacing its anglophone originary myths, the field of cultural studies has fast internationalized (Abbas and Erni 2005). Despite its anti-disciplinarity skew, it has proven a resilient and flexible formation in many countries. Taken as synonymous with the fatuities of postmodernism – often the byword in public discourse for the decline of the civilized humanities – cultural studies has flourished as a de facto bridge across humanities specializations. Decried for its vacuous theoretical predilections, the rise in cultural research’s fortune has seen the discipline forge productive, powerful collaborations with public, private and governmental organizations, and in some countries, even figure in national research policy and priorities. Resilient, even celebratory (in an appropriately sceptical manner) in surmounting these mixed fortunes, cultural studies in the 2010s faces profound challenges and complex new opportunities – that arise from the new politics of culture, everyday life, social experience and power relations. Recurrent questions have been discussed of how, why, for what purpose, where and with whom should cultural studies be advanced? (Grossberg 2010). Cultural studies has always developed with the accompanying strains of its attendant critical self-assessment. In this, one of the leading figures, a trenchant critical intelligence and honest broker, remains Professor Graeme Turner.
Turner’s work as a leading scholar of media and cultural studies is well known internationally. His clear voice and deft synthesis have made cultural studies penetrable to the undergraduate novice without ever losing the attention of his contemporaries. But what might be less well known to those who have never worked alongside Turner is that his excellence in areas beyond research and publication has been equally important to the formation of cultural studies as a distinctive discipline within Australia. As a mentor, his ideas and advice have influenced new generations of Australian scholars. As a manager, he has demonstrated ways in which this skill, usually detested by humanities academics, can actually improve the working lives of those around him. As a lobbyist, he has represented the humanities to universities and governments across Australia, with great effect.
This collection of papers aims to capture and reflect upon these broader dimensions of Turner’s work and the importance of these dynamics of mentoring, management and institutionalization (Morris and Hjorth 2012, Striphas 1998), as well as specific national and regional conditions, policy and politics for the forms cultural studies takes. The anthology was inspired by an event that was held at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, in August 2012 to mark Turner’s retirement. Turner retired from his official position at the University of Queensland in 2012 but remains very active as a researcher, mentor and humanities policy adviser. The commemorative event held at the University of Queensland reflected not only on Turner’s substantial record as a scholar but also on the building of Australian cultural studies more generally. Turner’s career, blending the ideas, politics and practices of building a new field of study, was representative of many of the qualities that make cultural studies in Australia distinctive. Building on this event, this special issue takes the opportunity of Turner’s (non-)retirement to consider the legacies of his work and the project of Australian cultural studies in general – and what these now signify for cultural studies.
The four of us who initiated this project – the three of us, plus Melissa Gregg, who was influential in its early phase – met through our time at Turner’s peerless Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies (with the telltale abbreviation CCCS). While the CCCS was frequently referred to as ‘Graeme’s Centre’, it is a testament to Turner’s approach to fostering research that he himself saw the intellectual productivity of the CCCS as resulting from collaborative mutual support among the resident scholars, while the burdens of securing funding and maintaining political goodwill on behalf of ‘his’ Centre remained his alone. Our idea was that through a critical re-evaluation of Turner’s writings, teaching, policy and advocacy, this special issue could also contribute towards the much needed accounting under way of the possibilities, politics, prospects and programmes for advancing cultural studies into the coming decades. This is an endeavour which Turner catalysed with his trenchant What’s Become of Cultural Studies (Turner 2012), and to which other distinguished cultural studies figures have contributed. Thus we hope that this collection of papers would serve not only to reflect upon the impact of Turner’s work as an individual but also to consider how Australian cultural studies has made contributions to global discussions of media and culture – and what directions and possibilities the antipodean angle offers now.
About Graeme Turner
Born in Sydney on 2 September 1947, Turner took a BA (Hons) in literature at the University of Sydney (1965–1968), then travelled to Canada for his MA (Hons) at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, awarded in 1970. Returning to Australia, from 1971 to 1973, Turner taught at Mitchell College of Advanced Education, in Bathurst, a regional city three hours’ drive from Sydney. He returned overseas to study for a Ph.D. in the School of English and American Studies, University of East Anglia, UK, which was awarded in 1977.
Back in Australia, Turner moved to Perth, Western Australia, to teach in the School of English at the Western Australian Institute of Technology, where the humanities were being shaken up by the new ideas in cultural, film and media studies. Here Turner was a key figure in various projects that proved decisive for the formation of a distinctively Australian cultural studies. During the time Turner was there, Perth was home to figures such as John Fiske (Fiske et al. 1987), with whom he collaborated on book projects, as well as other significant figures in the field such as John Hartley and Toby Miller (see Miller’s contribution here – Miller 2015; on this period, see also Frow 2007 and King and Turner 2010).
Turner moved to Queensland in 1985 to take up a Senior Lectureship at the Queensland Institute of Technology (which became Queensland University of Technology). In 1989, he moved across town to the University of Queensland to take up an Associate Professorship in the Department of English, assuming a full professorship in 1994. After serving as Head of School, in 1999, with strong support from the Vice Chancellor, he established the CCCS, where post-retirement he continues as Emeritus Professor. Other important relationships with Australia-based cultural studies scholars would flourish in this period – with those in Brisbane such as Stuart Cunningham, Tony Bennett and John Frow (who also moved from Perth to Brisbane to work at the University of Queensland), and also with those circulating through Sydney, such as Meaghan Morris (see Morris 2015), Ien Ang (who also migrated from Perth to the East Coast, founding the Centre for Cultural Research at University of Western Sydney), Elspeth Probyn (after she moved from Canada to properly establish cultural studies at the University of Sydney), and many others.
Through his long, productive and canny career, Turner has contributed to a number of fields but characteristically always with cultural studies as an abiding presence and decisive base. Turner established himself as an important theorist of cinema and film studies (Turner 1988, 2002). He was a pioneer in cultural studies approaches to studying national culture, through his many publications on Australian culture, media and society (Turner 1986, 1993, 1994, Kuna and Turner 1994). A rock musician himself, Turner has made important contributions to contemporary music research (Bennett et al. 1993). Turner is a key figure in television studies, co-author and co-editor of important collections and books. Initially focusing on Australian television (Tulloch and Turner 1989, Turner and Cunningham 2000), Turner became increasingly preoccupied with how to achieve an adequate, genuinely international understanding of contemporary television in its new digital, post-broadcast ecologies (Pertierra and Turner 2013, Sinclair and Turner 2004, Tay et al. 2015; Turner and Tay 2009, 2010). Turner was one of the early movers in celebrity studies (Turner et al. 2000, Turner 2004), which has proven a rich vein of enquiry to provide a critical way into interrogating developments in media and culture such as the turn to reality television, user-generated content, digital platforms and other instances of the ‘demotic turn’ in media and culture (Turner 2010). Elsewhere over many years, Turner has maintained a critical stance and engagement with news, current affairs, talk radio and journalism (Turner 1996, 2005, Turner and Crofts 2007).
Through this wide-ranging intellectual endeavour, Turner has been a consistent mainstay of Australian cultural studies. In turn, Australian cultural studies has been an important force in the international development of cultural studies as a discipline – something represented by the career of the pioneering journal Australian Journal of Cultural Studies, which commenced and was published in Perth (from 1983 to 1987), then was expatriated from 1987 to the present day as Cultural Studies (Frow 2007, Morris 1992).
Alongside his own research on film, television and national culture, Turner established his claims to speak of cultural studies, through his widely read 1990 British Cultural Studies: An Introduction (Turner 1990). As well as providing one of the first systematic accounts of British cultural studies, one was one of the first textbooks in the discipline generally. For Turner himself, it provided an explicit way to work out his own position on, claim to, and, advice for, cultural studies, something he addressed explicitly in the famous 1990 Cultural Studies Now and in the Future conference held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (see Turner 1992a, Turner et al. 1992).
In the early 1990s, especially, there was a nominative and institutionalizing conjuncture for Australian cultural studies, marked by various important discussions of what this might constitute and do (for instance see Ang, 1992, Ang and Hartley 1992, Benterrak et al. 1984, Frow and Morris 1993, Muecke 1992). Turner was a consistent theorist of the relationship of Australian cultural studies and the generativeness and limits of its specificity, as he often put it, against the typical reluctance of gradually internationalizing cultural studies to explicitly locate its various parts (see, for instance, Turner 1992b, Grossberg 1993).
This emphasis on the need to locate cultural studies has been an important, continuing thread in Turner’s work up to his latest work on international television, supported by a prestigious Australian Research Council (ARC) Federation Fellowship. The material support for Turner for undertaking large-scale empirical and theoretical work brought together in this Locating Television project was also very much provided by the CCCS.
He built the CCCS into a world-class research centre, especially through his appointment and nurturing of steady flow of talented postdoctoral researchers – something for which he became renowned (see Gregg 2015, in this volume). During this time, he employed 21 researchers on full-time positions: Mark Andrejevic, Melissa Bellanta, Gerard Goggin, Ben Goldsmith, Melissa Gregg, Ramaswami Harindranath, Anita Harris, Gay Hawkins, Sukhmani Khorana, Geert Lovink, Abigail Loxham, Carmen Luke, Mark McLelland, Adrian Mabbott Athique, Anna Pertierra, Morgan Richards, Graham St John, Jinna Tay, Anthea Taylor, Zala Volcic and Kitty van Vuuren. Most of these researchers commenced as postdoctoral fellows, and their time at CCCS proved pivotal to their flourishing as fully fledged scholars pursuing academic careers.
The CCCS was the base for a very significant initiative that leveraged Turner’s expertise in mentoring, and greatly fertilized the field, especially through systematically and creatively bringing together Australia’s abundance of distinguished cultural studies scholars, with the next generations. This was the Cultural Research Network (CRN; 2004–2009), a national group of top cultural researchers, funded by the ARC, that Turner initiated and led. Genuinely interdisciplinary between cultural studies and adjoining disciplines, including cultural history, cultural geography and cultural anthropology, CRN provided a matrix for stimulating, developing and theorizing a wide range of international visits and exchanges, minor and major projects, many of which ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Citation Information
  7. Notes on Contributors
  8. 1. What’s become of Australian cultural studies: The legacies of Graeme Turner
  9. 2. Turning up to play: ‘GT’ and the modern game
  10. 3. Dependencia meets gentle nationalism
  11. 4. Kylie will be OK: On the (im-)possibility of Australian celebrity studies
  12. 5. Cultural studies and the culture concept
  13. 6. Politics as scholarly practice: Graeme Turner and the art of advocacy
  14. 7. The effective academic executive
  15. 8. Afterword: So … what has become of Australian cultural studies?
  16. Index

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