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  1. Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction.John Storey - 2001 - Pearson Longman.
    In this 4th edition of his successful Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction, John Storey has extensively revised the text throughout.
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  2. Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: A Reader.John Storey (ed.) - 1998 - Ft Prentice Hall.
    New to this edition: 4 new readings Stuart Hall The rediscovery of 'ideology': return of the repressed in media studies Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe Post ...
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  3. An Introductory Guide to Cultural Theory and Popular Culture.John Storey - 1994 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 52 (4):492-493.
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  4. Rockin'hegemony: West Coast rock and Amerika's war in Vietnam'.John Storey - 1998 - In Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: A Reader. Ft Prentice Hall. pp. 88--97.
     
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  5. Introduction: the study of popular culture and cultural studies.John Storey - 1998 - In Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: A Reader. Ft Prentice Hall.
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  6. Managers' Roles in the Evolution of Business Knowledge.John Storey, Graeme Salaman, Richard Holti & Thomas Diefenbach - 2008 - In Harry Scarbrough, The Evolution of Business Knowledge. Oxford University Press.
     
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  7. Postmodernism and popular culture.John Storey - 2011 - In Stuart Sim, The Routledge companion to postmodernism. New York: Routledge.
     
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  8.  6
    Spectres of Pessimism: A Cultural Logic of the Worst by Mark Schmitt (review).John Storey - 2024 - Utopian Studies 35 (1):256-260.
    What I have called radical utopianism was an important concept for two of the founding figures of British cultural studies, E. P. Thompson and Raymond Williams.1 In 1976, in the revised edition of William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary, Thompson introduced into English Miguel Abensour's concept of the "education of desire."2 This has had a profound impact on what has become known as utopian studies but has had hardly any influence on cultural studies. Ruth Levitas together with Thompson (from whom she (...)
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