Popular Culture and Ideology

 
What is Popular Culture?
 
 
What is Culture?
 
Raymond Williams (1983) Culture refers
to:
“A general process of intellectual, spiritual and
aesthetic development” i.e. Western Culture
“A particular way of life: whether of a people,
period or group” i.e. Passtimes/habits/religious
rituals etc.
“The works and practices of intellectual and
especially artistic activity” i.e. Ballet, movies,
novels.  “Signifying Practices”
 
Culture Cont’d
 
“Popular culture” focuses on the second
and third definitions.
It relates to “lived practices” of a society or
group
And it relates to the artistic/intellectual
products of that society.
 
 
Ideology
 
5 ways of understanding ideology:
A body of ideas articulated by a group
(professions, political parties)
A means of distorting of social realities
Images of reality as presented in art
Fixing connotations to present as natural and
general what is particular and man-made.
 Rituals and actions that connect us to the
social order (Althusser)
 
Six Definitions of Popular Culture
 
Any definition of “popular culture”
invokes multiple connotations of
“popular” as well as “culture:
“Well liked by many people”,
“inferior kinds of work”
“made to appeal to people”
“made by the people themselves” (Williams
1983)
 
Popular culture can refer to any culture
which appeals to a large group of people,
quantifiable through number of sales,
downloads etc.
 
However any cultural artifact can sell
large numbers.  Does this alone
determine it as “popular”? Why or Why
not?
 
Popular Culture can also refer to what
remains after a society distinguishes what is
“high culture.”  Popular Culture is then
categorized as “inferior”
 
Society sets qualifications for “high culture”
such as “complexity” “realism” etc.  P.C. Is
what “fails”.
 
Pierre Bourdieu: Distinctions of culture
often follow distinctions of class. “Complex”
works require greater investment of time
and money.
 
“The denial of lower, coarse, vulgar, venal,
servile—in a word, natural—enjoyment,
which constitutes the sacred sphere of
culture, implies an affirmation of the
superiority of those who can be satisfied
with the sublimated, refined, disinterested,
gratuitous, distinguished pleasures forever
closed to the profane. That is why art and
cultural consumption are predisposed,
consciously and deliberately or not, to fulfil a
social function of legitimating social
differences.”  Pierre Bourdieu 
Distinction: A
Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste.
 
Popular Culture is also defined as “mass culture”:
Mass-produced for mass-consumption
 
Is formulaic and politically manipulative (
Die Hard
, 
Avatar
)
Is “hopelessly commercial”
Audiences are passive consumers rather than active
readers.
It is imposed by corporations/government
Is American/Americanized
 
This implies the existence of an “other” culture, a non-
alienated, organic culture or “golden age” which P.C. is a
corruption.  What is the problem with this view?
 
Also does this not imply that consumers of P.C. are dupes
of the system who need to be “woken up” by the
intelligentsia/culture makers?  (Wake up sheeple!)
 
Popular Culture can refer to culture
produced by the people. (Urban/Folk
culture)
 
However, is it always produced this way?
Where do the images and tropes that
make up “folk” culture and “urban”
culture come from?
 
 
 
 
 
Popular Culture can refer to the terrain
of struggle between the forces of
“resistance” and “incorporation”
 
Based on Antonio Gramsci’s theory.
“Hegemony” refers to the way in which
the powerful “lead” by earning consent
rather than “controlling” society through
force alone.
 
Gramsci
 
In Gramsci’s view, the dominant classes
develop a hegemonic culture that propagates
its own values as “common sense”.
 
Intellectuals and artists can act as agents for
the hegemonic culture, or for a culture of
resistance.
 
Is hegemony still a reality? What is the
hegemonic culture in the west in 2015?
 
 
 
 
In the Neo-Gramscian definition, Popular Culture
is neither “imposed from above”, nor “emerges
from below” but rather is a “terrain of exchange
and negotiation” between dominant and
subordinate groups.
 
This explains the fluidity of P.C. How oppositional
cultural elements can be appropriated by
dominant groups, (Record companies making
millions on Anti-corporate bands,  Che Guevara T-
shirts) And also how elements of high culture
become popularized. (The Nutcracker in ads,
opera movies)
 
 
Finally, P.C. is associated with
postmodernism.  Postmodern culture no
longer recognizes arbitrary “taste”
divisions.
 
Why is this a good thing?
 
Why is this not a good thing?
 
All concepts of “popular culture” are
haunted by a present/absent “other”.
 
This “other” determines how P.C. will be
theorized (as failure? as resistance? as
native? as folk?)
 
There are a multitude of approaches one
can take to P.C.  And you have many to
choose from.
 
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Popular culture encompasses the lived practices and artistic products of society, contrasting with high culture. Various definitions highlight its appeal to a wide audience and its distinction from high culture. The relationship between popular culture and ideology is explored through practices that shape societal beliefs and norms.

  • Popular Culture
  • Ideology
  • Artistic Expression
  • Society
  • Cultural Practices

Uploaded on Aug 18, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is Popular Culture?

  2. What is Culture? Raymond Williams (1983) Culture refers to: A general process of intellectual, spiritual and aesthetic development i.e. Western Culture A particular way of life: whether of a people, period or group i.e. Passtimes/habits/religious rituals etc. The works and practices of intellectual and especially artistic activity i.e. Ballet, movies, novels. Signifying Practices

  3. Culture Contd Popular culture focuses on the second and third definitions. It relates to lived practices of a society or group And it relates to the artistic/intellectual products of that society.

  4. Ideology 5 ways of understanding ideology: A body of ideas articulated by a group (professions, political parties) A means of distorting of social realities Images of reality as presented in art Fixing connotations to present as natural and general what is particular and man-made. Rituals and actions that connect us to the social order (Althusser)

  5. Six Definitions of Popular Culture Any definition of popular culture invokes multiple connotations of popular as well as culture: Well liked by many people , inferior kinds of work made to appeal to people made by the people themselves (Williams 1983)

  6. Popular culture can refer to any culture which appeals to a large group of people, quantifiable through number of sales, downloads etc. However any cultural artifact can sell large numbers. Does this alone determine it as popular ? Why or Why not?

  7. Popular Culture can also refer to what remains after a society distinguishes what is high culture. Popular Culture is then categorized as inferior Society sets qualifications for high culture such as complexity realism etc. P.C. Is what fails . Pierre Bourdieu: Distinctions of culture often follow distinctions of class. Complex works require greater investment of time and money.

  8. The denial of lower, coarse, vulgar, venal, servile in a word, natural enjoyment, which constitutes the sacred sphere of culture, implies an affirmation of the superiority of those who can be satisfied with the sublimated, refined, disinterested, gratuitous, distinguished pleasures forever closed to the profane. That is why art and cultural consumption are predisposed, consciously and deliberately or not, to fulfil a social function of legitimating social differences. Pierre Bourdieu Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste.

  9. Popular Culture is also defined as mass culture: Mass-produced for mass-consumption Is formulaic and politically manipulative (Die Hard, Avatar) Is hopelessly commercial Audiences are passive consumers rather than active readers. It is imposed by corporations/government Is American/Americanized This implies the existence of an other culture, a non- alienated, organic culture or golden age which P.C. is a corruption. What is the problem with this view? Also does this not imply that consumers of P.C. are dupes of the system who need to be woken up by the intelligentsia/culture makers? (Wake up sheeple!)

  10. Popular Culture can refer to culture produced by the people. (Urban/Folk culture) However, is it always produced this way? Where do the images and tropes that make up folk culture and urban culture come from?

  11. Popular Culture can refer to the terrain of struggle between the forces of resistance and incorporation Based on Antonio Gramsci s theory. Hegemony refers to the way in which the powerful lead by earning consent rather than controlling society through force alone.

  12. Gramsci In Gramsci s view, the dominant classes develop a hegemonic culture that propagates its own values as common sense . Intellectuals and artists can act as agents for the hegemonic culture, or for a culture of resistance. Is hegemony still a reality? What is the hegemonic culture in the west in 2015?

  13. In the Neo-Gramscian definition, Popular Culture is neither imposed from above , nor emerges from below but rather is a terrain of exchange and negotiation between dominant and subordinate groups. This explains the fluidity of P.C. How oppositional cultural elements can be appropriated by dominant groups, (Record companies making millions on Anti-corporate bands, Che Guevara T- shirts) And also how elements of high culture become popularized. (The Nutcracker in ads, opera movies)

  14. Finally, P.C. is associated with postmodernism. Postmodern culture no longer recognizes arbitrary taste divisions. Why is this a good thing? Why is this not a good thing?

  15. All concepts of popular culture are haunted by a present/absent other . This other determines how P.C. will be theorized (as failure? as resistance? as native? as folk?) There are a multitude of approaches one can take to P.C. And you have many to choose from.

More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#