Popular culture
Popular culture, or pop culture, is the vernacular (people's) culture that prevails in any given society. The content of popular culture is determined by everyday interactions, needs and desires, the cultural 'moments' that make up our everyday lives. It can include any number of practices such as knitting, cooking, chopping wood, storytelling, playing cards and throwing or kicking a ball.
20th century popular culture
In modern urban mass societies, popular culture has been crucially shaped by
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the development of industrial mass production, the introduction of new technolgies of sound and image broadcasting and recording, and the growth of mass media industries -- the film, broadcast radio and television, and the book publishing industries, as well as the print and electronic news media.
Related Topics:
Mass production - Mass media - Film - Broadcast - Radio - Television - Publishing - News media
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But popular culture cannot be described as just the aggregate product of those industries; instead, it is the result of a continuing interactions between those industries and those who consume their products. Bennett (1980, p.153-218) distinguishes between 'primary' and 'secondary' popular culture, the first being mass product and the second being local re-production.
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Popular culture is constantly changing and is specific to place and time. It forms currents and eddies, in the sense that a small group of people will have a strong interest in an area of which the mainstream popular culture is only partially aware; thus, for example, the electro-pop group Kraftwerk has "impinged on mainstream popular culture to the extent that they have been referenced in The Simpsons and Father Ted."
Related Topics:
Time - Small group of people - Mainstream - Kraftwerk - The Simpsons - Father Ted
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Items of popular culture most typically appeal to a broad spectrum of the public. Some argue that broad-appeal items dominate popular culture because profit-making companies that produce and sell items of popular culture attempt to maximize their profits by emphasizing broadly appealing items. (see culture industry)
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Criticism
A widely held opinion about popular culture is that it tends to be superficial. Cultural items that require extensive experience, training, or reflection to be appreciated seldom become items of popular culture. Contrary to its term, Pop culture is often at the leading edge of culture--adopted by cultural mavens or alphas--then adopted later by the laggards of the mainstream.
Related Topics:
Superficial - Alpha
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Sources
Popular culture has multiple origins. A principal source is the set of industries that make a profit by inventing and promulgating cultural material. These include the popular music industry, film, television, radio, video game publishers, and book publishing.
Related Topics:
Popular music - Radio - Video game - Book
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A second and very different source of popular culture is the folkloric element. In preindustrial times, the only culture was folk culture, and popular culture did not exist. This earlier layer of culture still persists today, for example in the form of jokes or slang, which spread through the population by word of mouth much as they always have. The rise of the Internet has provided a new channel of folkloric transmission, and thus has given renewed strength to this element of popular culture.
Related Topics:
Folk culture - Joke - Slang - Word of mouth - Internet
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The folkloric element of popular culture is heavily engaged with the commercial element; indeed popular culture might be defined as the kind of folkloric culture that arises under heavy commercial influence. To the repeated chagrin of the purveyors of commercial culture, the public has its own tastes, and it cannot always be predicted which cultural items sold to it will be successful and thus form the next ingredient of popular culture. Moreover, beliefs and opinions about the products of commercial culture (e.g. "My favorite character is SpongeBob SquarePants") are spread by word of mouth, and are modified in the process just as all folklore is.
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A different source of popular culture is the set of professional communities that provide the public with facts about the world, frequently accompanied by interpretation. This includes the news media, as well as the scientific and scholarly communities. The work of scientists and scholars is mined by the news media and promulgated to the general public, often emphasizing "factoids" that have the power to amaze, or other items with an inherent appeal. To give an example, giant pandas are prominent items of popular culture; parasitic worms, though of greater practical importance, are not.
Related Topics:
News media - Factoid - Giant panda - Parasitic worms
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Both scholarly facts and news stories are modified through folkloric transmission, sometimes to the point of being transformed to outright falsehoods, known as urban myths (example: "the Eskimos have 50 different words for snow"). Clearly, many urban myths have no factual origin at all, and were simply made up for fun.
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~ Table of Content ~
| ► | Introduction |
| ► | 18th and 19th century popular culture |
| ► | 20th century popular culture |
| ► | See Also |
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