Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 296
Trim: 5½ x 8¾
978-0-7425-7050-4 • Paperback • June 2011 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7425-7051-1 • eBook • August 2011 • $47.50 • (£37.00)
Jeffrey T. Nealon is Liberal Arts Research Professor of English at Penn State University.
Susan Searls Giroux is assistant professor of English at McMaster University.
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Why Theory?
Chapter 2: Author/ity
Chapter 3: Reading
Chapter 4: Subjectivity
Chapter 5: Culture
Multiculturalism
Popular Culture
Media Culture
Media Culture 2.0
Chapter 6: Ideology
Chapter 7: History
Chapter 8: Space/Time
Chapter 9: Posts
Postmodernism
Postculturalism
Postcolonialism
Chapter 10: Differences
Gender
Queer
Race
Class
Concluding Differences
Chapter 11: Life
Biopower
Resistance
The Economics of Culture; or, the Biopower Business
Chapter 12: Nature
Animality
Chapter 13: Agency
Credits
Index
About the Authors
They're back! Nealon and Sarls Giroux still pack more thoughtful questions and more useful information into the second edition of their 'toolbox' than multi-volume encyclopedias. If you can find a better guide for both beginners and more advanced students to the major intellectual challenges of our time, go ahead and buy it. Meanwhile, the readers of this handy (and witty) little text will already be writing the works that will be discussed in the third edition.
— John McGowan, The Ruel W. Tyson Jr. Distinguished Professor of Humanities, University of North Carolina; coeditor of The Norton Anthology
The Theory Toolbox is essential and required reading in my undergraduate and graduate architectural history and theory courses. The book is particularly useful as an excellent introduction to basic concepts that students in humanities, science, and design need to engage in meaningful discussion of culture and society. Through timely examples from popular culture and working questions that stimulate active discussion both in the classroom and in the online environment, The Theory Toolbox is my go-to guide for critical concepts as it inspires and engenders critical thinking and reasoned dialogue for the beginning theory student.
— Renata Hejduk, Arizona State University
Students find The Theory Toolbox isn't about learning theory through narrow interpretive lenses but thinking critically through theorizing and questioning perspectives.
— Richard Bower, Cayuga Community College
As a first introduction for the perplexed and confused to critical and cultural theory, there's no better place to start than The Theory Toolbox. The addition of chapters on Life and Nature in this second edition are welcome. They are written as engagingly and insightfully as the rest of the book, and as with the rest, these chapters tease out the ways in which the natural order is made to seem natural through biopower and the defense of an uncritical line between humanity and animality. With its clear, concise, and accurate accounts of often complex theories, instructors will find this an excellent addition to any theory course; with its provocative working questions and up-to-date, funny examples, students will find this book to be illuminating and exhilarating.
— Bruce B. Janz, University of Central Florida
Students quickly learn to employ theoretical concepts in their own work. The authors support this development by examining theory in relation to material that may at first seem familiar but that the authors then encourage the students to question in complex ways. The new chapters introduce important emerging areas of scholarship that students and instructors should find appealing.
— Tracy Neal Leavelle, Creighton University
I have used The Theory Toolbox several times in my Communication Theory classes, and the response from my students was extremely positive. The theories and concepts in the Toolbox are clearly presented and approachable despite the fact that these ideas are often difficult to cover at the undergraduate level. Nealon and Searls Giroux explain complex ideas using everyday poetry, music and pop culture artifacts that are readily accessible to everyone. They really get my students thinking and engaged. The new chapters on Life and Nature promise similar thought-provoking and lively discussions.
— Katy Wiss, Western Connecticut State University
The Theory Toolbox is original and unusual, breaking the standard mold of social theory textbooks. It puts itself in the young theory student's shoes and imagines what s/he needs to know, and how best to convey difficult material. A distinctive feature of this book is its interdisciplinarity, borrowing concepts from humanities disciplines in order to enrich social and sociological theory. My theory students will definitely need this path-breaking book in their toolboxes.
— Ben Agger
In our deeply anti-intellectual climate, wherein faith trumps reason and twittering has displaced thinking, Nealon and Searls Giroux perform the great act of showing how and why thinking still matters. From their opening engagement with the punk song 'Why Theory?' they give us an impassioned argument for the important uses of theory. As the title suggests, The Theory Toolbox, instead of simply reviewing schools of theory and criticism, aims to help students figure out what they can do with theoretical concepts as tools for living. The Theory Toolbox engenders pragmatic encounters with theorists from Nietzsche to Deleuze to Agamben and provides productive engagements with key concepts such as agency and ideology. Darwin, Black Sabbath, and Facebook are among a wide variety of examples that Nealon and Searls Giroux deploy to demonstrate why and how theory matters in everyday life. This edition presents compelling new chapters on Life and Nature animated by Foucault and the animal rights movement. For a generation growing up amidst the ruins of capitalism and the endless distractions of social media, this book offers a path for all students desiring to become thinking citizens.
— Kevin DeLuca, University of Georgia
As the title suggests, this work by Nealon and Giroux can be considered an assemblage of tools (or approaches) that students may use to examine contemporary culture. Unlike other introductions to theory, such as Terry Eagleton's Literary Theory (2nd ed., 1996), The Theory Toolbox is not organized by theoretical schools or movements but by concepts such as 'Reading,' 'History,' and 'Authority.' Each chapter introduces a concept, demonstrates how that concept can be used to analyze an instance of contemporary culture, and then ends with questions for readers to ponder. A bibliography with suggestions for further reading follows. The Theory Toolbox was first published in 2003, and many of the chapters in the second edition appear verbatim. New to this edition are sections such as 'Media Culture 2.0' and entire chapters titled 'Life' and 'Nature.' The added sections amount to 25 percent new material and merit a new edition. This book is geared toward lower-division undergraduates, and the tone, language, and examples reflect this focus. For example, YouTube, Facebook, and Black Sabbath are analyzed or questioned. Instructors using theory in their classroom teaching may find this book a useful means of introducing difficult concepts to first-year students in a manner they can understand. All undergraduates will find this a valuable companion for analyzing contemporary culture.
— Choice Reviews
Literary Theory
Critical Social Theory
Cultural Studies
Introduction to Literary Criticism
Critical Media Studies
Introduction to Communication Theory
Social Theory
Appropriate Courses:
New features
—The most clearly written and concise introduction to literary and critical social theory available.
—Better integration than other texts of social, cultural, and literary theory.
—Organized around key tools of criticism and concepts rather than literary movements.
—Updated throughout, including a new discussion of "media 2.0" and new chapters on life and nature.
—Strong integration of popular culture and mass media with literary and social criticism.
—Excellent brief intro to assign alongside the Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism.
—Further Readings for each concept serve as a guide to the literature for instructors and students.
—"Working Questions" throughout the text involve students immediately in meaningful inquiry.