390 likes | 400 Views
Explore the characteristics of popular and folk culture and learn how to distinguish between them. Discover the differences in clothing, music, diffusion, and more.
E N D
Topic: Characteristics of Popular & Folk Cultural Patterns • Aim: In what ways can we distinguish Popular culture from Folk culture? • Do Now: What are some differences you see between the images in your packet?
So What’s the Difference? Folk Culture is traditionally practiced primarily by small, homogenous (people who are similar) groups living in isolated rural areas (or LDC’s). Folk culture has multiple hearths. Popular culture is found in large, heterogeneous societies (usually MDC’s) that share certain habits despite differences in other personal characteristics
So what’s the difference??? • Folk Culture: practiced by small, homogenous, geographically isolated groups, typically in LDC’s. Has multiple hearths • Popular (pop) Culture: found in large, heterogeneous societies. Scale is larger than folk culture and typically a product of MDC’s.
Popular Culture: A wide-ranging group of heterogeneous people, who stretch across identities and across the world, and who embrace cultural traits such as music, dance, clothing, and food preference that change frequently and are ubiquitous on the cultural landscape. Madonna wearing a red string Kabbalah bracelet.
Diffusion of Folk Cultures The Amish: Relocation Diffusion of Folk Culture Distinctive clothing, farming, religious practices, and other customs C U L T U R E • Amish customs illustrate how relocation diffusion distributes folk culture • Diffused their culture through migration • Living in rural and frontier settlements that are relatively isolated from other groups, Amish communities retained their traditional customs, even as other European immigrants to the U.S. N O N M A T E R I A L
Popular (pop) Music: • Written by specific artists with the purpose of being mass produced and sold. Typically requires technical skill and is produced in studios • Originated around 1900 • Diffusion of pop music begin during WWII with the Armed Forces Radio Network broadcasting music to American soldiers
Hip Hop: Folk music or pop music? • Originated in South Bronx, NY • Roots in West African storytelling (griots) • Folk? Has a specific message that only relates to the group who wrote it • Pop? Has a global reach; uses advanced electronics
Popular Culture: • Wide Distribution:differences from place to place uncommon • Housing: only small regional variations, more generally there are trends over time • Food:franchises, cargo planes, superhighways and freezer trucks have eliminated much local variation. Limited variations in choice regionally, esp. with alcohol and snacks. Substantial variations by ethnicity.
Folk Clothing Preferences • Style of clothing worn in response to distinctive agricultural practices and climatic conditions • Ex. • Folk custom in the Netherlands to wear wooden shoes because of practical uses in wet climates. • Fur-lined boots protect against cold in arctic climates. • Popular Clothing Preferences • Style of clothing generally reflects occupation and income rather than particular environment. • Ex. • Business suits worn by professionals • Designer clothes worn by the affluent
A man wearing wooden shoes bikes on a flooded street in Stellendam, Netherlands
Rapid Diffusion of Popular Clothing Styles: • Improved communications central to rapid diffusion • Ex. Time for original designs for women’s dresses to be designed in fashion capitals—e.g., Paris or London—and reproductions available in stores has diminished from years to a few weeks. • Jeans is an important symbol 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
Jeans have become valuable status symbols in many regions despite longstanding folk traditions.
Globalization of clothing Ponchos Taken From Folk Culture
Origin and Diffusion of Folk and Popular Sports • Sports originated as isolated folk customs and diffused like other folk culture via relocation diffusion. • Example: • Football (soccer) originated in England in the eleventh century. • Transformation from folk to popular sport began in 1800s when organized clubs were formed in the UK. • Professional players hired • Standardized rules and organized professional league established in 1863 in UK marks formal transition from folk sport to popular sport.
Transition from folk to popular culture • Lacrosse: started by Iroquois