Examines the relationship between popular culture and politics. This book stresses that popular culture is politically important because it reflects and operates within broader socio-political conditions, can transport political ideas and ideologies, and is a site where identities and institutions are shaped, contested, and reproduced.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Part one : Negotiating order and authority -- Part two : Neotiating the nation-state -- Part three : Negotiating collective identity -- Part four : Conclusion.