There's no need to call in cultural theorists for an explanation.
For the last two decades, cultural theorists have gained ground in the world of ideas and popular opinion.
Over the last few years, however, something has appeared that not even the most prescient cultural theorists anticipated.
Those adopting this position form a curious alliance of cultural theorists and conservatives.
The process involved philosophers, sociologists, political scientists and cultural theorists.
But cultural theorists have grown just as skeptical of the notion that TV was ever a one-way conversation.
British newspaper The Observer called him "one of the country's leading cultural theorists".
Michel Feher (born 1956) is a French philosopher and cultural theorist.
He attempts to provide (in his words) a less radical view of social epistemology than those suggested by cultural theorists and postmodernists under that name.
The problem with being a cultural theorist who admits to doing no formal research is that sometimes reality can rise up to bite you.