Media culture
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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Mass culture is a term which was used in the late nineteenth century until the 1950s to denote popular culture. Since the 1960s the term popular culture has been used.
Currently, some definitions of popular culture equates pop culture with mass culture. This is seen as a commercial culture, mass produced for mass consumption. From a Western European perspective, this may be compared to American culture. Alternatively, "pop culture" can be defined as an "authentic" culture of the people, but this can be problematic because there are many ways of defining the "people." Storey argues that there is a political dimension to popular culture; neo-Gramscian hegemony theory "... sees popular culture as a site of struggle between the 'resistance' of subordinate groups in society and the forces of 'incorporation' operating in the interests of dominant groups in society." A postmodernism approach to popular culture would "no longer recognise the distinction between high and popular culture'
John Storey emphasises that popular culture emerges from the urbanisation of the industrial revolution, which identifies the term with the usual definitions of 'mass culture'. Studies of Shakespeare (by Weimann, Barber or Bristol, for example) locate much of the characteristic vitality of his drama in its participation in Renaissance popular culture, while contemporary practitioners like Dario Fo and John McGrath use popular culture in its Gramscian sense that includes ancient folk traditions (the commedia dell'arte for example).
Popular culture changes constantly and occurs uniquely in place and time. It forms currents and eddies, and represents a complex of mutually-interdependent perspectives and values that influence society and its institutions in various ways. For example, certain currents of pop culture may originate from, (or diverge into) a subculture, representing perspectives with which the mainstream popular culture has only limited familiarity. Items of popular culture most typically appeal to a broad spectrum of the public.
See also
- The Society of the Spectacle
- Culture industry
- Mass society
- Media studies
- Consumer capitalism
- Mad Men
- Popular culture
- More popular than Jesus
- Advanced capitalism
- Agenda-setting theory
Further reading
- The Intellectuals and the Masses (1992)
- The Myth of Mass Culture, a 1977 popular culture studies book by Alan Swingewood
- After the Great Divide: Modernism, Mass Culture, Postmodernism, a study by Andreas Huyssen