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 Write Out : › When does the diffusion of pop culture become a problems  Agenda: › Weekend Recap › Buzz word Quiz › Note Quiz from Friday – Period 10.

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Presentation on theme: " Write Out : › When does the diffusion of pop culture become a problems  Agenda: › Weekend Recap › Buzz word Quiz › Note Quiz from Friday – Period 10."— Presentation transcript:

1  Write Out : › When does the diffusion of pop culture become a problems  Agenda: › Weekend Recap › Buzz word Quiz › Note Quiz from Friday – Period 10 › Notes on popular culture (8/9 – Finish ppt from Friday)  Reminder: › Culture MC Exam – Wednesday

2  1. Explain the hip hop map from the as I enter from Friday.  2. How do folk sports spread?  3. What types of materials does folk housing tend to use?  4. List two of the main types of houses found in the US.  5. What determines the type of clothing warn in folk cultures?  6. What has led to the rapid diffusion of clothing styles?  7. What is the most important means by which pop culture is diffused across the earth?

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4  Contributions to the spread of popular culture  Industrialization – HOW?  Urbanization  Rise of formal education  Increase in leisure time › All of the reasons popular culture spread caused folk culture to retreat

5  Often Destroys Folk Culture › preserves traditions as museum pieces or tourism gimmicks.  Mexican Mariachis Swimming Pool, West Edmonton Mall, Canada

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8 Western Media Imperialism?  U.S., Britain, and Japan dominate worldwide media.  Glorified consumerism, violence, sexuality, and militarism?  U.S. (Networks and CNN) and British (BBC) news media provide/control the dissemination of information worldwide.  Why does this matter?

9 Accelerated Resource Use through Accelerated Consumption  Furs: minx, lynx, jaguar, kangaroo, whale, sea otters (18 th Century Russians) fed early fashion trends.  Consumerism evident in most Western Media fashions  - EXPLAIN  Inefficient over-consumption of Meats;  what does this mean?  New larger housing  Associated with energy and water use.  Golf courses  valuable water and destroy habitat worldwide. Pollution: waste from fuel generation and discarded products, plastics, marketing and packaging materials

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12  Their style is no style; a sense of sameness pervades.  Nothing sets these structures apart as being in a particular place; this is placelessness

13  James Kunstler speaks of “geography of nowhere” in describing America

14  Most effective device for popular culture diffusion  Commercial advertising of retail products bombards us visually and orally  Using psychology, we are sold products we do not need

15  Modern advertising is very place-conscious › Products and services are linked to popular, admired places › Example of the “Marlboro Man” and the romanticized American West › Remarkably such techniques work in countries as far away as Egypt

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17  Symbols are important marketing tools and companies aim to get instant recognition for their products.  Here a row of former Chinese shop houses has been renovated as a “strip mall.”  The signs are international status symbols meaning “American.”

18  American pop culture is becoming increasingly popular in Asia to the dismay of many traditional parents.  What signs do you recognize?

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24  Popular cultures of North America, Europe, and Australia have become similar and in constant contact › Americans lineup to hear touring British rock musicians › Rocky Mountain ski resorts are built in Alpine- Swiss architecture › Latest Paris fashions appear in American department stores › Fast-food franchises of McDonalds and Kentucky Fried Chicken diffused to Russia › Motel chains such as Holiday Inn took root in Tibet and other countries

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26 Television has diffused widely since the 1950s, but some areas still have low numbers of TVs per population Much media is still state-controlled. Ten Most Censored Countries: 1.North Korea 2.Myanmar (Burma) 3.Turkmenistan 4.Equatorial Guinea 5.Libya 6.Eritrea 7.Cuba 8.Uzbekistan 9.Syria 10.Belarus Source: The Committee to Protect Journalists. www.cpj.org.

27  Personal computers and Internet access have created another new type of place  Certain words we use imply it has a geography—”Cyberspace”  The information superhighway connects not two points, but all points, creating a new sort of place

28  Cyberspace possesses some geographical qualities › Enhances opportunities for communication over long distances › Allows access to rare data banks › Encourages and speeds cultural diffusion › The Internet helps heighten regional contrasts › Uneven spatial distribution of Internet connections creates a new way people differ

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30 The Internet is diffusing today, but access varies widely.

31  Status Update Activity!

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33  Long Bhutan Long Bhutan  Short Bhutan Short Bhutan

34  The country of Bhutan should have government control on TV to preserve it’s folk culture.

35  Americanization: › The diffusion of brands, values, and attitudes throughout the world.  Neolocalism: › Renewed interest in sustaining and promoting the uniqueness of a place  Glocalization: › Local and global forces interact and both are changed in the process

36  Commodification: › The conversion of an object, concept, procedure once not available for purchase into a good/service that can now be bought or sold.  EX. Slavery commodifies human beings.  Other examples?

37  Think about: › Your favorite unit in AP HUG…what will be the easiest to write on?  Agenda: › FRQ writing › FRQ Scoring Guidelines  Reminder: › Practice test and FRQ over break!


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