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Functionalist Approach to Popular Culture

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Functionalist Approach to Popular Culture. Lesson 2 Popular Culture – Sociology 86 Robert Wonser. Theoretical takes on Popular Culture. Functionalist : culture “ functions ” as the social glue that generates solidarity and cohesion within human groups and societies. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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FUNCTIONALIST APPROACH TO POPULAR CULTURE LESSON 2 POPULAR CULTURE – SOCIOLOGY 86 ROBERT WONSER 1
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FUNCTIONALIST APPROACH TO POPULAR CULTURE

LESSON 2POPULAR CULTURE – SOCIOLOGY 86ROBERT WONSER

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THEORETICAL TAKES ON POPULAR CULTUREFunctionalist: culture “functions” as the social glue that generates solidarity and cohesion within human groups and societies.Contemporary collective rituals—hs football games, parades, pep rallies—serve to forge emotional bonds of recognition, identity, and trust within communities and social groupsAllows strangers to communicate with each other in public

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CULTURE’S FUNCTIONSDescribes the uses of mass entertainment (their functions) in generating solidarity in large anonymous communities

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EMILE DURKHEIMFollowing Durkheim, ALL culture (including popular) is founded on non-rational foundations and is upheld through the rituals and the distinction between the sacred and the profaneThe sacred is dangerous and extremely important; it must be approached seriously, respectfully and with due preparation The profane are the rest of the world, all other things you can deal with matter-of-factly, with whatever mood you wish and for whatever purpose.

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CULTURE AS RELIGIONDurkheim argued that religious symbols or images represented not merely gods or beliefs, but the religious group members themselves and their collective conscious just as national flags represent not only the idea of a nation but the actual citizens.Religious rituals and practices create symbolic boundaries demarcating the separation of the sacred and the profane elements of the universe.

What does this mean?

How do Americans react when it is burned?

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THE IMPORTANCE OF RITUALSIf people share the same sacred emblems and holy names, the same doctrines, they know they belong to the same ritual community.They can identify with one another as members of a group that has feelings of collective solidarity and strength.Even short conversations are mini rituals that affirm one’s identity in a select group and boost our emotional energy.Sacred symbols also tell us who is not a part of our group.

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EMOTIONAL ENERGYA strong benefit of group membership (society, a cultural group, or subcultural group) is the emotional energy one receives from taking part in social gatheringsDurkheim called this“collective effervescence” or a shared feeling of identity in which the individual members of the group (whether tribe or congregation, or in our case music fans or sports fans) experience waves of emotion, a sense of unity and togetherness How does it feel to be

in either situation?

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The basic elements of religious life—shared symbols and images, imagined boundaries separating the sacred from the profane, and rituals that help participants generate collective effervescence—that provide the social glue that binds societies through thick and thin.

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RITUALS OF SOLIDARITY AND SOCIAL COHESION IN POPULAR CULTURESymbols, rituals and practices surrounding pop culture’s production and consumption can bring people together by generating a shared sense of solidarity Like Native American and Aboriginal tribes, sports teams are often signified by animalistic totems.

• Ex: Chicago Bears, Atlanta Falcons, Miami Dolphins, etc.

What brings these people together?

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IMAGINED COMMUNITYImagined community Live televised events have the potential to generate similarly effervescent experiences among viewers who, despite their lack of physical proximity to one another, still feel as if they are members of a collective audience sharing the simultaneity of a moment Can offer greater feelings of solidarity among audiences while the actual events are chaotic

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POPULAR CULTURE AS A RESOURCE FOR PUBLIC REFLECTIONPop culture’s movies, tv shows, music, etc. are the stories we tell ourselves about ourselves Celebrities, regardless of how little we care for them as individual people, we obsess over their reported comedic highs and tragic lows because their stories provide resources for reflecting on the social world and the human experience.Modern day morality plays, Aesop’s fables and traditional folktales: give tangible form to otherwise abstract ethical dilemmas concerning the nature of human relations and social behavior.

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MAD MENWhat does Mad Men tell us about us?Set in the sixties, we can see how ‘we were’Sexism, homophobia, racism

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RITUALS OF REBELLIONRituals of rebellion are seemingly transgressive displays which ultimately restore and solidify the social order.Rituals represent a kind of institutionalized protest that allows subordinate group members to momentarily let off steam without actually granting them real power for a significant period of time

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RITUALS OF REBELLIONBy temporarily inverting the hierarchical structure of the social order as a form of play, such rituals remind participants of the dominant status norms that organize and regulate society on a more daily basis.How does popular culture fulfill this function?

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DARKER FUNCTIONS OF POPULAR CULTURE

How rebellious are these acts? Does their ritualized character takes out their bite?

• All political parties are attacked Does the comedic atmosphere in which the attacks are levied diminish how seriously viewers will take the criticism?Do these collective rituals of solidarity ultimately bolster the legitimacy of those in power by artfully appropriating dissent?

Do we critically evaluate their critiques?

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DARKER FUNCTIONS OF POPULAR CULTURE

Promoting stereotypes, myths and fearsPortrayal of sexist, racist, classist and homophobic images (including ads)Reinforcement of status quoPropagating of the American Dream ideologyPop culture provides not only a resource for reflection but for distractionThe word ‘sport’ derives from the French desporter, which means “to divert, amuse, please, play”Only 0.03% of all high school men’s basketball players make it to the NBA


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