Low culture  

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 +[[Image:Musk, Hashish and Blood, a French language collection of tales by Hector France,.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[Musk, Hashish and Blood]]'' ([[1886]]) is a French language collection of tales by [[Hector France]] "The adventures of a modern man among the cruel men and the passionate women of Algiers," reads the jacket copy of the pulpy paperback. [[Orientalism|Orientalist]] imagery of veiled temptresses and sword-wielding hunks abound. ]]
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:"Both [[High culture|high]] and [[low culture]] have produced [[masterpiece]]s and works of [[mediocrity]]. It is our task to find beauty in [[unexpected]] places." :"Both [[High culture|high]] and [[low culture]] have produced [[masterpiece]]s and works of [[mediocrity]]. It is our task to find beauty in [[unexpected]] places."

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Image:Musk, Hashish and Blood, a French language collection of tales by Hector France,.jpg
Musk, Hashish and Blood (1886) is a French language collection of tales by Hector France "The adventures of a modern man among the cruel men and the passionate women of Algiers," reads the jacket copy of the pulpy paperback. Orientalist imagery of veiled temptresses and sword-wielding hunks abound.

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"Both high and low culture have produced masterpieces and works of mediocrity. It is our task to find beauty in unexpected places."

Low culture is a derogatory term for some forms of popular culture. The term is often encountered in discourses on the nature of culture. Its opposite is high culture. It has been said by culture theorists that both high culture and low culture are subcultures.

Kitsch, slapstick, camp, escapist fiction, popular music, comic books, tattoo art and exploitation films are examples of low culture. It has often been stated that in postmodern times, the boundary between high culture and low culture has blurred. See the 1990s artwork of Jeff Koons for example of appropriation of low art tropes.

Romanticism was one of the first artistic movements to reappraise "low culture", when previously maligned medieval romances started to influence literature and Susan Sontag was one of the first essayists to write about the intersection of high and low art in her 1964 essay "Notes on 'Camp'".

Contents

History

The history of low culture or working class culture can be traced from panem et circenses (bread and circuses) and Latin profanity in Roman antiquity, to mass readership starting in the Victorian era (dime novels), music halls in the 19th century, pulp magazines of the 20th century, exploitation films of the second half of the 20th century and video nasties in the 1980s.

See also

"body" genres" - bread and circuses - "low" art - lowbrow (American art movement) - working class culture - culture - folk culture - popular culture - low modernism

Related by connotation

artificial - bad taste - basic instinct - camp - cheap - commercial - conventional - common - derivative - entertaining - ephemera - exploitation - formulaic - gratuitous - low budget - lurid - mass - ordinary - pop - popular - proletariat - prurient - sensationalism - scatology - shocking - stereotype - trash - under-the-counter - underground - vulgar

Contrast

"high" culture

In film

B-movies - exploitation films - grindhouse films - paracinema - television - video nasties - violent films

In print

comics - escapist fiction - dime novels - genre fiction - men's magazines - paraliterature - popular fiction - pulp fiction - yellow journalism

In music

disco - house - music hall - popular music - pop music -

In the visual realm

advertising - applied arts - caricature - decorative arts - design - graffiti - kitsch

In performing arts

burlesque - circus - peepshow - striptease - vaudeville -


By genre

adventure - "body" genres - carnival - comedy - horror - melodrama - pornography - romance

Baser instincts

hedonism - instinct - escapism

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Low culture" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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