Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What is “culture”? One approach:

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What is “culture”? One approach:"— Presentation transcript:

1 What is “culture”? One approach: Matthew Arnold, Culture and Anarchy, 1867 “the best that has been thought and said in the world” breakdown in authority brought about by working class culture

2 Cultural Studies Approach:
Culture is how we live nature. Culture is the practices and processes of making meanings with and from the “texts” we encounter in our everyday lives Example: South Texas “culture”

3 Culture and Power “Cultures” are made from the production, circulation and consumption of meanings. Because texts can mean different things, there is often struggle over what they mean.

4 What is popular culture?
John Fiske: Two economies of cultural production INDUSTRIAL ECONOMY: produced by industry POPULAR ECONOMY: produced by people Popular culture is made useful, meaningful, “popular” by the people, not industry.

5 Books and Magazines History of Printing Gutenberg's (re)invention of movable type and mechanical printing (1450) "Chapbooks" books of poetry, ballads, or prose

6 Early American Book Publishing
Bay Psalm Book, 1640 Poor Richard's Almanac by Ben Franklin Political pamphlets: Common Sense by Thomas Paine

7 Early Magazines UK in 1700s "miscellanies" After American Revolution means for political expression Copyright Act of 1790: copyright for 14 years + 14 years renewable

8 Growth of American magazines is slow in 19C:
Low literacy Expensive to mail Civil War Illustrations and photos In-depth coverage Mathew Brady

9 19th Century Books Popularization of content Uncle Tom’s Cabin sold 300,000 copies Dime novels Horatio Alger books Pulp Fiction in early 20th century

10 19th Century Magazines Specialized genres: women’s magazines Postal Act of 1879: magazines paid lower third class postage, but treated as first class Muckrakers: sift through unpleasant aspects of public life, crusaded for various causes

11 20th Century Magazine Genres
Newsmagazines: summarize and interpret Photojournalism magazines Women's magazines Traditional joined by targeted magazines Hobbies

12 Magazine Economics Income from: Subscriptions Newsstand sales Advertising Magazine industry consolidation & market segmentation niche market mass market still successful Distribution Retailers often take what wholesaler sends

13 Legal Issues: Copying can be a crime Copyright protects author, but conglomerates likely beneficiaries of extensions. Fair Use If you buy it, you can make a copy of it so that you may use it


Download ppt "What is “culture”? One approach:"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google