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Folk and Pop Culture Key Issues 2, 3, and 4.

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Presentation on theme: "Folk and Pop Culture Key Issues 2, 3, and 4."— Presentation transcript:

1 Folk and Pop Culture Key Issues 2, 3, and 4

2 Key Issue 2 Where Are Folk and Popular Material Culture Distributed?
Vocab Alert!

3 Livin’ In A Material World…

4 Get (Graphically) Organized!
Material Culture Clothing Housing Food Pop Folk Folk Pop Folk Pop

5 Clothing

6 Folk Clothing Preferences
Style of clothing worn in response to distinctive agricultural practices and climatic conditions. Where? Why There?

7 Popular Clothing Styles
Style of clothing generally reflects occupation and income rather than a particular environment Business suits worn by professionals Designer clothes worn by the affluent Rapid Diffusion of Popular Clothing Styles Improved communications central to rapid diffusion Diffusion from fashion capitals— Paris or London—to reproductions available in “local” stores has diminished from years to a few weeks.

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9 Blue Jeans Jeans are a good example of the diffusion of Western popular culture. Local Diversity Japan: customized with patches and cutouts Korea: frayed, ripped, or shredded Italy: bleached on seat of jeans CLICK TO WATCH

10 Folk Food Preferences People adapt their food preferences to conditions in the environment. Asia Rice: milder, moister regions Wheat: drier regions Europe Italy: preference for quick-frying foods resulted from fuel shortages Northern Europe: abundant wood supply encouraged slow stewing and roasting of foods

11 AP HUG Vocab in the Express-News Food Section!
I ♥ RLEs!

12 Folk Foods CLICK TO WATCH

13 CLICK for interactive map
Regionalization CLICK for interactive map

14 Both Folk and Pop Culture Have Food Taboos
People may desire or avoid certain foods, as a result of perceived beneficial or harmful natural traits. Ancient Hebrews in the Bible forbidden to eat animals that did not chew their cud or that have cloven feet and fish lacking fins or scales Muslims have a taboo against eating pork Hindus have a taboo against consuming cattle

15 Eating Insects… In China!

16 Folk Housing Where? Why There?

17 Environmental Influences on Folk Housing
Available resources influence building materials used on folk houses—e.g., stone, grass, sod, and skins Most common wood and brick Climate and local topography influence design of housing structures Distinct designs in different locations can be attributed to local cultural preference AND local physical geography

18 Folk Housing Materials

19 U.S. Folk Housing- New England
Federal Salt Box Georgian Cape Cod

20 U.S. Folk Housing- Middle Atlantic
Four Over Four I House

21 U.S. Folk Housing- Lower Chesapeake/Tidewater South

22 Contemporary U.S. Popular Housing
Since mid-twentieth century, houses display popular culture rather than regional influences Most people no longer build their own houses but instead are mass-produced by construction companies Houses show the influence of shapes, materials, detailing, and other features of architectural style in style or demand at any one point in time

23 Can You? Explain the relationship between folk material culture and the environment? Identify regional preferences in material culture? Explain why popular culture diffuses quickly and has influence over products/styles?

24 Key Issue 3 Why Is Access to Folk and Popular Culture Unequal?

25 Electronic Diffusion of Popular Culture

26 Role of Television Principal obstacle to accessing popular culture is lack of access to electronic media Most important electronic media format to popular culture is TV for two reasons Watching TV is most popular leisure activity in the world. TV is most important mechanism for rapidly diffusing popular culture around the world

27 Think About It…

28 We Have Given the World BOTH…

29 Diffusion of TV- Mid 20th Century
TV technology originated simultaneously in multiple hearths in the early twentieth century— e.g., UK, France, Germany, Japan, Soviet Union, and the United States Over the course of the twentieth century, the United States went from dominating the world share of TVs to being nearly equal in rates of ownership with most developing countries

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31 Diffusion of the Internet- Late 20th Century
Diffusion follows pattern established by TV but at a more rapid rate In 1995, Internet users in the United States accounted for more than half of the global users- by 2011, 77 percent of the U.S. population accessed the Internet Accounted for 10 percent of the global users- now global share decreased by roughly 40 percent in less than 10 years

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33 Diffusion of Social Media: 21st Century
Same diffusion pattern as TV and Internet Facebook2008, Facebook users in United States consisted of 1/3 of all global users, by 2011, global share decreased to 1/5 Twitter United States was source of 1/3 of all tweets in 2010 Second leader of tweets is India CLICK TO WATCH

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35 Key Issue 4 Why Do Folk and Popular Culture Face Sustainability Challenges??

36 Sustainability Challenges for Folk Culture
Increased connection with popular culture makes maintaining centuries-old practices difficult Impacts of globalization on the landscape creates challenges in maintaining a unique landscape Global diffusion of popular culture beliefs has challenged the subservience of women to men that is embedded in some folk customs

37 The Amish: Preserving Cultural Identity

38 Popular Culture’s Negative Effects
Creates a homogenous landscape, “placelessness” roads/highways, “big box stores,” gated communities Disconnect with landscape: indoor swimming pools, desert surfing. Folk Cultures destroyed – or preserves traditions as museum pieces or tourism gimmicks or change in traditional roles and values.

39 Accelerated Resource Use through Accelerated Consumption
Furs minx, lynx, jaguar, kangaroo, whale, sea otters (18th Century Russians) led early fashion trends Inefficient over-consumption of meat, poultry, fish fed other fish and chicken Mineral extraction for machines, plastics and fuel New housing and associated energy and water use Golf courses (and other leisure activities) use valuable water and destroy habitat worldwide Pollution waste from fuel generation and discarded products, plastics, marketing and packaging materials

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42 Global Diffusion: Unintended Impacts
International prostitution Dowries in India CLICK TO READ

43 Cultural 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. These networks are unlikely to focus or provide third world perspective on issues important in the LDCs.

44 Remember! Traits and leisure activities associated with folk culture tend to diffuse more slowly than those of popular culture Folk culture tends to be greatly influenced by local environmental conditions Popular culture is diffused around the world through electronic media that began with the TV and continues with the Internet and Social Media Popular culture operates outside the constraints of the physical environment Globalization and greater connectivity have fostered a world where new ideas are spread more rapidly and fewer places of isolation exist- for better or worse


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