1 / 10

Confronting and Creating Culture

Confronting and Creating Culture. What is Culture?. “The shared patterns of behaviors and interactions, cognitive constructs, and affective understanding that are learned through a process of socialization.”

umay
Download Presentation

Confronting and Creating Culture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Confronting and Creating Culture

  2. What is Culture? • “The shared patterns of behaviors and interactions, cognitive constructs, and affective understanding that are learned through a process of socialization.” • “The system of shared beliefs, values, customs, behaviors, and artifacts that the members of society use to cope with their world and with one another, and that are transmitted from generation to generation through learning.” • “The integrated pattern of human knowledge, belief, and behavior that is both a result of and integral to the human capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations.” • “The accumulated habits, attitudes, and beliefs of a group of people that defines for them their behavior and way of life; the total set of learned activities of a people.”

  3. Popular Culture…taken from Common Culture by Petracca and Sorapure • “is the shared knowledge and practices of a specific group at a specific time” • “both reflects and influences people’s way of life” • “is transitory, subject to change, and often an initiator of change”

  4. Web 2.0 • The Internet was conceived as a utopian space where gender, race, class, and sexuality were neutral forces • Instead, virtual realities tend to reinforce current social standards about gender and other identities • Gendered and racialized content supported by advertising, entertainment, and pornography • Traditional ideas about gender are reinforced by the ways women and men use the Internet

  5. Background Debates • Does the mass media have a significant amount of power over its audience, or does the audience ultimately have more power than the media?

  6. John Fiske: Audience Power “Popular culture is made by the people, not produced by the culture industry. All the culture industries can do is produce a repertoire of texts or cultural resources for the various formations of the people to use or reject in the on-going process of producing their popular culture.”

  7. Theodor Adorno: Media Power • The Culture Industry is a well-oiled machine producing entertainment products in order to make profit. Media products are not “art,” they are commodities. • “The power of the culture industry’s ideology is such that conformity has replaced consciousness.” The culture industry “impedes the development of autonomous independent individuals who judge and decide consciously for themselves.”

  8. Deconstructions • Viewing cultural artifacts through a particular framework which draws their attention to the artifact itself, as a whole and/or its parts, as well as the origin of production. • Exposing what is absent, what is taken for granted, and what is centrally located versus what is forced to the peripheries.

  9. Studying Gender in the Media • Count the women/men and the subject areas in which they appear. • Are women allowed to speak with dignity and authority? • Are traditional gender roles reinforced? • Are active women represented as superwomen? • Does their portrayal reinforce the stereotype of women as docile, emotional, non-analytical, technically inept? • Are men represented as stereotypically tough, macho, or violent?

  10. Studying Gender in the Media • Are women represented primarily as sex-objects? • What physical attributes apply to men and women? • Does the material normalize violence against women? • Are women/men represented as one-dimensional or multidimensional? • Does the material reflect the diversity of women and men in the community?

More Related