Cultural Studies means studying culture - but from particular angles
In Cultural Studies, 'culture' is understood broadly, but with an emphasis on culture as a site of social and political struggle. The contemporary theories we use view culture as dynamic rather than static. We consider the following sorts of questions: how is culture produced, and who controls it? How do we use and interpret culture? How might culture be preserved, destroyed, or changed? How does our sense of identity merge with our culture? How is culture changing and developing in the 21st century?
Unique to UC
The programme at Canterbury is the only one in Aotearoa New Zealand, and we draw on more than 15 participating programmes - most of the Faculty of Arts.
One of the central strengths of Cultural Studies is its interdisciplinarity - the way that it draws on the perspectives, methods, and theories of numerous fields of study. The idea is not to reduce culture to something simple and unified, but to appreciate its complexity. This means graduates come away with a sophisticated understanding of the many competing forces that shape our everyday lives.
Cultural Studies pathways
We specialise in four strands or pathways of study: gender and sexuality, Aotearoa New Zealand studies, human-animal studies, and popular and visual culture.