Attempting to bridge the gap between specialised scholarship in the
humanistic disciplines and an interdisciplinary project of cultural
analysis, Mieke Bal has written an intellectual travel guide that charts
the course 'beyond' cultural studies. As with any guide, it can be used
in a number of ways and the reader can follow or willfully ignore any of
the paths it maps or signposts.
Bal's focus for this book is the idea that interdisciplinarity in the
humanities - necessary, exciting, serious - must seek its heuristic and
methodological basis in concepts rather than its methods. Concepts are
not grids to put over an object. The counterpart of any given concept is
the cultural text or work or 'thing' that constitutes the object of
analysis. No concept is meaningful for cultural analysis unless it helps
us to understand the object better on its own terms.
Bal offers the reader a sustained theoretical reflection on how to 'do'
cultural analysis through a tentative practice of doing just that. This
offers a concrete practice to theoretical constructs, and allows the
proposed method more accessibility.