This web site is designed for students and scholars in the field of American studies, including such allied fields as ethnic, women's, queer, decoloniial and cultural
studies. Indeed, it is for anyone interested in learning
more about the development and current state of interdisciplinary cultural theory and method. As described in detail below, the core of the site is an extended biblographic essay, but in addition
there are pages offering sample theory course syllabi, a list of online theory journals,
and some additional theory sites to consult.
The bibliographic essay offers an historical survey of and an introduction to work on
theory and method in American cultural studies. My aim is to give American studies scholars, and scholars in allied
fields like ethnic, women's, queer, postcolonial and cultural studies, both a sense of trends over time and a tool kit for work in the present.
My principle of selection has been to restrict myself to work that, whatever its discipline of origin, has been widely used
in interdisciplinary studies; hence, I have not listed works whose impact seems to me to have been wholly
contained within a single, traditional field of scholarship. Given the breadth of the topic, no fully comprehensive list
is possible but I have tried to be broadly representative of a variety of approaches, selecting the most lucid treatments
of the highlighted theories and methods.
Each section begins with an introduction, and, taken in series, these offer an informal narrative of developments in
American Studies theory and method over the years. This is meant to be suggestive rather than definitive, and I assume
that other versions of this story could be told (indeed I cite some sources in my first section that tell the history
differently). While following something of a chronological development, I do not intend to imply that new theories are
always superior to old ones, but rather aim to suggest that certain theoretical and methodological paradigms (always
contested) have been prominent if not dominant in the field at particular historical moments.
Items within the sections
are arranged chrono-topically rather than alphabetically, such that they too form part of a narrative about historical
trends in theory and method. My aim is to embody my belief in the need to historicize theorizing, the need for
latecomers to understand the development of theory in relationship to earlier moments. While some of these changes may
have taken place in a semi-autonomous realm of Theory, most, I would contend, have been driven by currents of social
movement activity. More than anything, these theories have been shaped by the struggles of people violently erased from or profoundly misrepresented
in US histories--women,
people of color, the working class, sexual non-conformists, the disabled.
My categories are necessarily partly arbitrary and overlapping, since not all works fall
neatly into a "school" (especially in an inherently interdisciplinary field), but I believe the categories
I have created are heuristically useful in sorting out major approaches. Many individual works could have been listed
in more than one category (a fact I have dealt with when important through cross-referencing).
Recognizing that the necessarily abstract quality of theory makes
its practical intellectual and political usefulness less than clear, I have included some works
(marked by an asterisk *) that apply the given theory or method to particular American topics. In offering both
primary works of theory and secondary commentaries on them, I have tried also to accommodate the needs of both persons
new to issues in theory and method and those with more experience.
This bibliography grew out of my teaching of a graduate course on theory and method in American Studies and I
believe that it is in such a pedagogical context that it will prove most effective. But I have designed it to be
useful to any individual wishing to learn more about cultural theory and method. For a sample syllabus
of one version of the graduate course out of which this bibliography arose, see
Amst 513: Theory and Method in American
Studies.
This site is updated frequently, so I welcome comments and suggestions for additions, substitutions or corrections.
One general online resource I wish to note at the beginning, given the number of citations to the journal throughout
the bibliography, is American Quarterly.
AQ articles hyperlinked in this essay require a password gained through subscription to the
journal.
See also: