Intro 1. Curiously Parallel – The Nature of Culture Part I: Culture Makes Groups 2. Externalism – Identity (‘Me’ is ‘We’) 3. Demes – Universal-Adversarial Groupishness (‘We’ vs ‘They’) 4. Malvoisine – Bad Neighbours 5. Citizens – Demic Concentration Creates Knowledge Part II: Groups Make Knowledge 6. Meaningfulness – The Growth of Knowledge 7. Newness – Innovation 8. Waste – Reproductive Success 9. Extinction – Resilience and Ossification Part III: Outro 10. A Natural History of Demic Concentration Acknowledgements References Index
Cultural Science synthesises recent work across different disciplines, setting out a new, evolutionary approach to cultural studies.
John Hartley is Professor of Cultural Science and Director of the Centre for Culture and Technology at Curtin University, Western Australia; and Professor of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University, Wales. He was co-founder of the Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation at Queensland University of Technology, where he held an ARC Federation Fellowship and was founding Dean of the Creative Industries Faculty. He has held visiting scholar positions in the USA, UK, China, Germany and Denmark. He was awarded the Order of Australia for service to education, and holds fellowships of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, Royal Society of Arts, and International Communication Association. He has published more than 20 books (as author, co-author or editor) in communication, cultural and media studies, including Popular Reality (Bloomsbury). Jason Potts, Schumpeter Prize winner, is ARC Future Fellow, Professor and Principal Research Fellow in the School of Economics, Finance and Marketing at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia; and Editor of the Journal of Institutional Economics. He is the author of 6 books and over 80 papers in evolutionary economics and innovation.
Humans have evolved to make culture in the same way birds have
evolved to make nests and spiders to make webs. Even more telling
is the fact that culture has evolved over hundreds of thousands of
years to make human nature what it is. In this ambitious and
persuasive work, Hartley and Potts offer a vision of the
unification of behavioral science and cultural studies that
shatters traditional disciplinary boundaries.
*Herbert Gintis, External Professor, Santa Fe Institute, USA, and
Professor of Economics, Central European University, Hungary, and
author of A Cooperative Species: Human Reciprocity and its
Evolution (with Samuel Bowles, 2011)*
Hartley and Potts’ Cultural Science firmly grounds the study of
culture in a Darwinian evolutionary framework, emphasising how
knowledge, morality, innovation and even personal identity emerge
from the power of groups or demes pursuing shared goals, often in
competition with other similar demes. Cultural Science is suitable
for lay audiences and also as a reference text for the modern
scholarly study of culture.
*Mark Pagel, Professor of Evolutionary Biology, University of
Reading, UK, Fellow of the Royal Society, and author of Wired for
Culture*
The charm of Cultural Science is rather like that of watching David
Attenborough or Brian Cox in full flight, peering into rock pools,
turning over fossils, bringing to light creatures that are both
fascinating in themselves and hold clues to the possibilities of
life and the universe. Whatever else it may be, this is an
intellectual adventure, full of curious details and surprising
discoveries. It brims with enthusiasm and pedagogical passion. ...
It is a 'dangerous’ book in the best sense – ambitious,
experimental and heedless of risk.
*Communication Research & Practice*
Cultural Science is a wonderfully mind-challenging, expansive book
that is boldly ambitious. ... As I read it, at times I had moments
of exclaiming 'but! but! but!', yet those are signs of how
thoroughly it challenged me to reconsider and reconceive much of
the field of media, communication, and cultural studies, and much
of the work within it. Generative, 'big picture' books like this
are rare.
*Communication and the Public*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |