Page 243 - Cultural Studies and Political Economy
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232                           Index

           photography, 79, 80              portals for dialogue, 9, 29, 137–93
           physics, 168                     positivism, 15–16, 44, 48n29, 168. See
           pictograph, 80                      also Chicago political economy
           Pietrzyk, Kamilla, 49n50         Posner, Richard, 15
           Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan), 84  Poster, Mark, 9, 28, 45, 63, 106,
           Pitt, William, 152                  115n41, 128, 129, 139, 175–90,
           Plato, 38, 56n166, 138, 154, 191n13,  191n11, 196–99
             192n55                         postmodernism, 24, 50n70, 179
           Pleasantville, 28                poststructuralism, 62; and active
           pleasure, 27, 68, 71, 100–101, 168  audience, 124, 127; and American
           pluralism, 5, 7                     communication/media studies, 9,
           poetry, 167, 180                    111, 128, 129, 175, 186; and
           policy, 7, 8, 108, 109              articulation, 45, 63, 104, 109, 110,
           political economy, 11n17, 72, 113n17;  167, 170; and authenticity, 107, 127,
             and British cultural studies, 8, 68, 70,  178; and Baudrillard, 128, 130, 167,
             87; critical, 16-17, 31–32, 63;   175; critique of, 181–84; vs. cultural
             defined, 13, 122; emergence of, 6, 9,  materialism, 4, 62–65, 73, 89n7, 98,
             13–17, 46n9, 68; and false        111, 195; and cultural studies, 4, 5, 9,
             consciousness, 99–100; and        45, 62, 63, 65, 98, 104, 110, 111,
             knowledge, 7, 8, 17, 29–30, 36–38,  115n43, 117–30, 196; de-
             57n170, 58n188, 78, 81, 86, 98,   authenticates (deconstructs)
             115n43, 117–30, 140, 189; of media,  knowledge structures, 7, 44, 127,
             4, 8, 10n3, 21–23, 29, 31–32, 42, 68,  178, 184; defined, 51n70, 63; and
             107–8, 125, 175–90; and           Derrida, 51n70, 127, 129, 130n1,
             poststructuralism, 4, 9, 64, 108, 110,  175; opposes dialectics, 44, 45, 63,
             117–30; and power, 7, 19, 63, 70.  168, 190; and the Enlightenment, 7,
             See also Chicago political economy;  31, 44, 127, 184; and environment,
             determinism; social science       5, 197; as faux critical, 64, 117, 126,
           Political Economy (Mill), 72        178–79, 184–86, 195–96; in film,
           political organization, 4, 33       27–28, 45, 52n99; and grand
           political philosophy, 6, 117, 151;  narratives, 7, 152, 195; and
             contemporary, 15–17; critical 16–19;  Grossberg, 44, 45, 63, 64, 89n11,
             and moral philosophy, 7, 13, 15; and  129, 167, 168; and Innis, 138,
             neoclassical economics, 14–16     186–90; and interpretation, 45, 64,
           Political Register, 85              107, 124, 127; linguistic emphasis
           political science, 6, 152           of, 45, 64, 73, 176, 179, 197, 198;
           polity, 4, 8                        main axioms of, 108, 124; and
           polls, 74                           material reality, 44, 110, 138, 161,
           pollution, 15                       168, 190; and McLuhan 170–71; vs.
           Pooley, Jefferson, 121–22, 123      political economy, 4, 9, 31, 65, 98,
           Poor Man’s Advocate, 85             109, 138, 168, 175, 176, 184–86,
           The Poor Man’s Guardian, 85         190, 196; and Poster, 45, 63, 175–90;
           popular culture, 4, 26, 32, 42–44, 71,  and postmodernism, 51n70; reasons
             86, 104                           for abandoning, 196–98; and
           populism, 86                        reflexivity, 183–84; and Saul, 152,
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