The document defines key concepts related to the study of culture, popular culture, sociology, and anthropology. It discusses how sociology focuses on social relationships within human society, while anthropology studies human beings and cultures through time. Popular culture refers to cultural products consumed by most of society, in contrast to high culture of elites. The rise of popular culture is traced to the creation of the middle class during the Industrial Revolution. Components of culture discussed include material culture like technology, and non-material culture such as norms, mores, folkways, and language.
The document defines key concepts related to the study of culture, popular culture, sociology, and anthropology. It discusses how sociology focuses on social relationships within human society, while anthropology studies human beings and cultures through time. Popular culture refers to cultural products consumed by most of society, in contrast to high culture of elites. The rise of popular culture is traced to the creation of the middle class during the Industrial Revolution. Components of culture discussed include material culture like technology, and non-material culture such as norms, mores, folkways, and language.
The document defines key concepts related to the study of culture, popular culture, sociology, and anthropology. It discusses how sociology focuses on social relationships within human society, while anthropology studies human beings and cultures through time. Popular culture refers to cultural products consumed by most of society, in contrast to high culture of elites. The rise of popular culture is traced to the creation of the middle class during the Industrial Revolution. Components of culture discussed include material culture like technology, and non-material culture such as norms, mores, folkways, and language.
The document defines key concepts related to the study of culture, popular culture, sociology, and anthropology. It discusses how sociology focuses on social relationships within human society, while anthropology studies human beings and cultures through time. Popular culture refers to cultural products consumed by most of society, in contrast to high culture of elites. The rise of popular culture is traced to the creation of the middle class during the Industrial Revolution. Components of culture discussed include material culture like technology, and non-material culture such as norms, mores, folkways, and language.
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The Study of Culture
Prepared by: Rene A. Japitana
Social Science Instructor Defining Popular Culture Definition of Sociology and Culture • Sociology is the study of human society at a given period in time. • Anthropology is the study of human beings and their ancestors through time in terms of physical characteristics, environmental and social relations, and culture • Anthropology covers all characteristics of humanity, including physiology and evolutionary origins while sociology focuses on social relationships Beginnings of Anthropology and Sociology • The beginnings of anthropology go back to the period of discovery and exploration, from the nineteenth centuries. • Sources of facts are the accounts of early Western explorers, missionaries, soldiers, and colonial official regarding the strange behavior and beliefs as well as exotic appearance of people they had come in contact with. • Discoveries of flint tools and other artifacts in Europe in the early nineteenth century gave evidence of the existence of human beings a million years ago. • These discoveries happened at a time when advances in physics and chemistry were made, arousing an interest in scientific inquiry. • In the nineteenth century anthropology began to take shape as a separate field of study that had its root in the natural sciences, social sciences and the humanities. • Edward Tylor was the first professor of anthropology in Oxford, England. In United States, it was Franz Boas of Clark University, Massachusetts. • From 1980, ethnographers approached the study of local culture as embedded within regional and tribal forces. • Ethnography is the systematic study of people and culture Defining Popular Culture • Popular Culture (or "pop culture") refers in general to the traditions and material culture of a particular society. In the modern West, pop culture refers to cultural products such as music, art, literature, fashion, dance, film, cyberculture, television, and radio that are consumed by the majority of a society's population. Popular culture is those types of media that have mass accessibility and appeal. • The term "popular culture" was coined in the mid-19th century, and it referred to the cultural traditions of the people, in contrast to the "official culture" of the state or governing classes. In broad use today, it is defined in qualitative terms—pop culture is often considered a more superficial or lesser type of artistic expression. Defining Popular Culture • Popular Culture is the set of practices, beliefs, and objects that embody the most broadly shared meanings of a social system. It includes media objects, entertainment and leisure, fashion and trends, and linguistic conventions, among other things. Popular culture is usually associated with either mass culture or folk culture, and differentiated from high culture and various institutional cultures (political culture, educational culture, legal culture, etc.). Defining Popular Culture • Popular culture (also called mass culture or pop culture) is generally recognized by members of a society as a set of the practices, beliefs, and objects that are dominant or prevalent in a society at a given point in time. Popular culture also encompasses the activities and feelings produced as a result of interaction with these dominant objects. The primary driving force behind popular culture is mass appeal, and it is produced by what cultural analyst Theodor Adorno refers to as the "culture industry". Defining Popular Culture • Heavily influenced in modern times by mass media, this collection of ideas permeates the everyday lives of people in a given society. Therefore, popular culture has a way of influencing an individual's attitudes towards certain topics. • However, there are various ways to define pop culture. Because of this, popular culture is something that can be defined in a variety of conflicting ways by different people across different contexts. It is generally viewed in contrast to other forms of culture such as folk cults, working-class culture, or high culture, and also through different high praised perspectives such as psychoanalysis, structuralism, postmodernism, and more. The most common pop-culture categories are: entertainment (such as film, music, television and video games), sports, news (as in people/places in the news), politics, fashion, technology, and slang. Defining Popular Culture • In his wildly successful textbook "Cultural Theory and Popular Culture" (now in its 8th edition), British media specialist John Storey offers six different definitions of popular culture 1. Popular culture is simply culture that is widely favored or well-liked by many people: it has no negative connotations. 2. Popular culture is whatever is left after you've identified what "high culture" is: in this definition, pop culture is considered inferior, and it functions as a marker of status and class. 3. Pop culture can be defined as commercial objects that are produced for mass consumption by non-discriminating consumers. In this definition, popular culture is a tool used by the elites to suppress or take advantage of the masses. Defining Popular Culture 4. Popular culture is folk culture, something that arises from the people rather than imposed upon them: pop culture is authentic (created by the people) as opposed to commercial (thrust upon them by commercial enterprises) 5. Pop culture is negotiated: partly imposed on by the dominant classes, and partly resisted or changed by the subordinate classes. Dominants can create culture but the subordinates decide what they keep or discard. 6. The last definition of pop culture discussed by Storey is that in the postmodern world, in today's world, the distinction between "authentic" versus "commercial" is blurred. In pop culture today, users are free to embrace some manufactured content, alter it for their own use, or reject it entirely and create their own. Rise Popular Culture • Scholars trace the origins of the rise of popular culture to the creation of the middle class generated by the Industrial Revolution. People who were configured into working classes and moved into urban environments far from their traditional farming life began creating their own culture to share with their co-workers, as a part of separating from their parents and bosses. • After the end of World War II, innovations in mass media led to significant cultural and social changes in the west. At the same time, capitalism, specifically the need to generate profits, took on the role of marketing: newly invented goods were being marketed to different classes. The meaning of popular culture then began to merge with that of mass culture, consumer culture, image culture, media culture, and culture created by manufacturers for mass consumption. SOCIETY and CULTURE Definition of Sociology and Culture • Sociology is the study of human society at a given period in time. • Anthropology is the study of human beings and their ancestors through time in terms of physical characteristics, environmental and social relations, and culture • Anthropology covers all characteristics of humanity, including physiology and evolutionary origins while sociology focuses on social relationships The Individual in Society 1. Culture a. Concept of Culture- all the human beings learned to do, to use, to produce, to know and to believe as they grow to maturity and live out their in the social groups where they belong . 1. Culture and Biology- the habits shared by the members of each group, express the group’s culture 2. Culture Shock- this describes the difficulty of people have in adjusting to a new culture that differs markedly from their own Ethnocentrism and Cultural Relativism
• Ethnocentrism- people make judgments about other
cultures according to the customs and values of their own terms before comparisons can be made • Cultural Relativism- the recognition that the social groups and cultures must be studied and understood on their own • Counter Culture- opposite to the culture/ different to what is dominant • Accommodation- peaceful adjustment • Acculturation – acquire individual traits at a culture • Enculturation- process of learning the rules/ learning our own culture or socializing Components of Culture
• 1. Material Culture – consists of human technology- all
things human beings make and use, from small hand- held tools to skyscrapers • 2. Non- Material Culture – consists of the totality of knowledge, beliefs, values, and rules for appropriate behavior Non- Material Culture • Norms- are the rules of behavior that are agreed upon and shared within a culture and that prescribe limits of the acceptable behavior • Mores- strongly held norms that usually have a normal connotation and are based on the central values of culture (should follow the rules) • Folkways- are norms that permit a wide degree of individual interpretation as long as certain limits are not overstepped • Ideal Norms- expectations of what people should do under perfect conditions • Real Norms – that are expressed with qualifications and allowances for differences in individual behavior • Language- is the road map in culture