Key Concepts in Cultural Studies | Useful for English Literature Exams

Major Cultural Studies Concepts for UGC NET – Meanings & Pioneers

Major Cultural Studies Concepts for UGC NET
Meanings & Key Pioneers

This is a compact yet comprehensive, UGC-NET-oriented revision guide covering all major Cultural Studies concepts with brief meanings and their key pioneers. Concepts are grouped thematically to help in quick recall, match-the-following questions, and theory-based MCQs.

“Culture is ordinary.” — Raymond Williams

Culture, Ideology & Hegemony

  • Culture (ordinary / whole way of life) – Culture includes everyday practices, meanings and lived experiences, not just elite art. Raymond Williams (against Matthew Arnold).
  • High culture / Popular culture / Mass culture – Hierarchy between elite art and popular forms; later challenged by Cultural Studies. Arnold, F. R. Leavis; critiqued by Williams, Hall.
  • Ideology – Systems of ideas that naturalize power relations. Karl Marx; developed by Louis Althusser; adapted by Stuart Hall.
  • Hegemony – Consent-based domination where dominant ideas become “common sense.” Antonio Gramsci; used by Hall, CCCS.
  • Common sense / Good sense – Everyday beliefs shaped by ideology; “good sense” allows critique. Gramsci.
  • Interpellation – Ideology “hails” individuals into social subjects. Louis Althusser.

Representation, Discourse & Power

  • Representation – Meaning is constructed through language, images and discourse, not reflected. Stuart Hall, Roland Barthes.
  • Stereotype / Othering – Fixing difference to maintain power hierarchies. Hall, Edward Said.
  • Discourse – Systems of knowledge that regulate what can be said or thought. Michel Foucault.
  • Power/Knowledge – Knowledge is inseparable from power. Foucault.
  • Subject / Subjectivity – Identity produced through discourse and ideology. Althusser, Foucault.

Media, Communication & Audience

  • Encoding/Decoding Model – Media messages are encoded and decoded differently by audiences. Stuart Hall.
  • Dominant / Negotiated / Oppositional Reading – Audience positions in interpretation. Hall.
  • Preferred Meaning – Meaning aligned with dominant ideology. Hall.
  • Active Audience – Audiences interpret and resist meanings. Hall, John Fiske.
  • Culture Industry – Mass-produced culture pacifies audiences. Adorno, Horkheimer.
  • Standardization / Pseudo-individualization – Illusion of choice in mass culture. Adorno.

Class, Subculture & Everyday Life

  • Cultural Materialism – Culture linked to material conditions and politics. Raymond Williams.
  • Structures of Feeling – Lived emotional experience of a historical moment. Williams.
  • Subculture – Symbolic resistance through style and ritual. Dick Hebdige, Paul Willis.
  • Incorporation – Absorption of subcultures into mainstream culture. Hebdige.
  • Working-class Culture – Everyday practices as serious culture. Richard Hoggart, E. P. Thompson.

Identity, Race, Gender & Nation

  • Identity – Fluid and constructed, not fixed. Stuart Hall.
  • Race & Ethnicity – Social constructions shaped by colonial histories. Hall, Paul Gilroy.
  • Diaspora – Hybrid identities formed in displacement. Hall, Gilroy.
  • Hybridity – In-between cultural identities. Homi K. Bhabha.
  • Mimicry / Ambivalence – Partial imitation destabilizing colonial authority. Bhabha.
  • Orientalism – Western construction of the East as inferior. Edward Said.
  • Subaltern – Marginalized groups denied voice. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak.
  • Gender Performativity – Gender as repeated performance. Judith Butler.
  • Male Gaze – Visual pleasure structured by patriarchy. Laura Mulvey.
  • Nation as Narration – Nation as imagined through stories. Benedict Anderson.

Language, Signs & Text

  • Sign / Signifier / Signified – Linguistic units of meaning. Ferdinand de Saussure.
  • Mythologies – Second-order ideological meanings. Roland Barthes.
  • Semiotics – Study of signs and meanings. Saussure, Barthes.

Space, Globalisation & Consumer Culture

  • Public Sphere – Space of rational debate. Jürgen Habermas.
  • Globalisation – Intensified cultural and economic interconnections. Hall, Appadurai.
  • Postmodernism / Late Capitalism – Cultural logic of commodification. Fredric Jameson.
  • Simulacra / Hyperreality – Copies without originals. Jean Baudrillard.
  • Cultural Capital / Habitus – Taste and knowledge reproducing inequality. Pierre Bourdieu.
  • Circuit of Culture – Representation, identity, production, consumption, regulation. Paul du Gay et al..
For UGC NET, most Cultural Studies questions are built from these exact concept–theorist pairs.
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