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"science, technology and the ideologies of dominance". In Science (Open University, Milton Keynes 1997) Steve Fuller shows what science may look like to a Martian anthropologist. A good overview of the cultural studies of technology is found in Techno-Science and Cyber-Culture, edited by Stanley Aronowitz, Barbara Matinson and Michael Menser (Routledge, London 1996). Ziauddin Sardar and Jerome Ravetz provide an accessible introduction to the cultural politics of Cyberfutures (Pluto Press, London 1996). But there are no substitutes for Donna Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs and Women (Free Association Books, London 1991 ). Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s Figures in Black (Oxford University Press, Oxford 1987) takes issue with the notion of black literature as social realism. Black Literature and Literary Theory, edited by Gates (Routledge, London 1994) contains several noteworthy attempts to delineate the boundaries of black criticism . Beyond Eurocentrism and Multiculturalism , 2 volumes, (Common Courage Press, Monroe, Maine 1993) brings together the best of Cornel West. The best essays of bell hooks are collected in Yearnings: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics (South End Press, Boston, Mass. 1990). The Identity in Question, edited by John Rajchman (Routledge, London 1995) leads an informed expedition through the thorny issues of selfhood. Racism, Modernity and Identity, edited by Ali Rattansi and Sally Westwood (Polity Press, Oxford 1994) is an engaging anthology. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's Epistemology of the Closet (Penguin, Harmondsworth 1990) is a landmark introduction to Queer theory. Queer Theory/Sociology, edited by Steven Seidman (Blackwell, Oxford 1996) contains some illuminating papers on the construction of homosexual identity. Avtar Brah's Cartographies of Diaspora (Routledge, London 1996), Raymond Chow's Writing Diaspora (Indiana University Press, Bloomington 1993) and Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic (Verso, London 1993) provide excellent insights into Asian, Chinese and Black diasporas in the West. Glenn Jordan and Chris Weedon's Cultural Politics (Blackwell, Oxford 1995) gives a comprehensive account of "class, gender, race and the postmodern world". Feminine Sentences by Janet Wolff (Polity Press, Oxford 1990) contains some penetrating words on women and culture. Getting the Message: News, Truth and Power, edited by John Eldridge (Routledge. London 1993) summarizes decades of research by the Glasgow University Media Group. The Media Reader, edited by Manuel Alvarado and John Thompson (BFI, London 1990) provides a sensual tour of the pleasures and expectations of films and television. Malcolm Waters makes Globalisation (Routledge, London 1995) relatively palatable. John Tomlinson gives a very clear account of Cultural Imperialism (Pinter, London 1991). And Ziauddin Sardar's Postmodernism and the Other (Pluto, London 1997) tackles "lhe new imperialism of Western culture". Anwar Ibrahim , The Asian Renaissance (Times Books, Kuala Lumpur 1996) provides a perspective from a different culture . 173

"science, technology and the ideologies of dominance". In Science (Open University, Milton Keynes 1997) Steve Fuller shows what science may look like to a Martian anthropologist. A good overview of the cultural studies of technology is found in Techno-Science and Cyber-Culture, edited by Stanley Aronowitz, Barbara Matinson and Michael Menser (Routledge, London 1996). Ziauddin Sardar and Jerome Ravetz provide an accessible introduction to the cultural politics of Cyberfutures (Pluto Press, London 1996). But there are no substitutes for Donna Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs and Women (Free Association Books, London 1991 ). Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s Figures in Black (Oxford University Press, Oxford 1987) takes issue with the notion of black literature as social realism. Black Literature and Literary Theory, edited by Gates (Routledge, London 1994) contains several noteworthy attempts to delineate the boundaries of black criticism . Beyond Eurocentrism and Multiculturalism , 2 volumes, (Common Courage Press, Monroe, Maine 1993) brings together the best of Cornel West. The best essays of bell hooks are collected in Yearnings: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics (South End Press, Boston, Mass. 1990). The Identity in Question, edited by John Rajchman (Routledge, London 1995) leads an informed expedition through the thorny issues of selfhood. Racism, Modernity and Identity, edited by Ali Rattansi and Sally Westwood (Polity Press, Oxford 1994) is an engaging anthology. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's Epistemology of the Closet (Penguin, Harmondsworth 1990) is a landmark introduction to Queer theory. Queer Theory/Sociology, edited by Steven Seidman (Blackwell, Oxford 1996) contains some illuminating papers on the construction of homosexual identity. Avtar Brah's Cartographies of Diaspora (Routledge, London 1996), Raymond Chow's Writing Diaspora (Indiana University Press, Bloomington 1993) and Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic (Verso, London 1993) provide excellent insights into Asian, Chinese and Black diasporas in the West. Glenn Jordan and Chris Weedon's Cultural Politics (Blackwell, Oxford 1995) gives a comprehensive account of "class, gender, race and the postmodern world". Feminine Sentences by Janet Wolff (Polity Press, Oxford 1990) contains some penetrating words on women and culture. Getting the Message: News, Truth and Power, edited by John Eldridge (Routledge. London 1993) summarizes decades of research by the Glasgow University Media Group. The Media Reader, edited by Manuel Alvarado and John Thompson (BFI, London 1990) provides a sensual tour of the pleasures and expectations of films and television. Malcolm Waters makes Globalisation (Routledge, London 1995) relatively palatable. John Tomlinson gives a very clear account of Cultural Imperialism (Pinter, London 1991). And Ziauddin Sardar's Postmodernism and the Other (Pluto, London 1997) tackles "lhe new imperialism of Western culture". Anwar Ibrahim , The Asian Renaissance (Times Books, Kuala Lumpur 1996) provides a perspective from a different culture .

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