High Culture and Popular Culture


Do you prefer listening to opera or
hip hop music? Do you like watching horse racing or NASCAR? Do you read
books of poetry or celebrity magazines? In each pair, one type of
entertainment is considered high-brow and the other low-brow.
Sociologists use the term high culture
to describe the pattern of cultural experiences and attitudes that
exist in the highest class segments of a society. People often associate
high culture with intellectualism, political power, and prestige. In
America, high culture also tends to be associated with wealth. Events
considered high culture can be expensive and formal—attending a ballet,
seeing a play, or listening to a live symphony performance.
The term popular culture
refers to the pattern of cultural experiences and attitudes that exist
in mainstream society. Popular culture events might include a parade, a
baseball game, or the season finale of a television show. Rock and pop
music—“pop” is short for “popular”—are part of popular culture. Popular
culture is often expressed and spread via commercial media such as
radio, television, movies, the music industry, publishers, and
corporate-run websites. Unlike high culture, popular culture is known
and accessible to most people. You can share a discussion of favorite
football teams with a new coworker or comment on American Idol
when making small talk in line at the grocery store. But if you tried
to launch into a deep discussion on the classical Greek play Antigone, few members of U.S. society today would be familiar with it.
Although high culture may be viewed
as superior to popular culture, the labels of high culture and popular
culture vary over time and place. Shakespearean plays, considered pop
culture when they were written, are now part of our society’s high
culture. Five hundred years from now, will our descendants associate Breaking Bad with the cultural elite?
Subculture and Counterculture
A subculture
is just what it sounds like—a smaller cultural group within a larger
culture; people of a subculture are part of the larger culture but also
share a specific identity within a smaller group.
Thousands of subcultures exist
within the United States. Ethnic and racial groups share the language,
food, and customs of their heritage. Other subcultures are united by
shared experiences. Biker culture revolves around a dedication to
motorcycles. Some subcultures are formed by members who possess traits
or preferences that differ from the majority of a society’s population.
The body modification community embraces aesthetic additions to the
human body, such as tattoos, piercings, and certain forms of plastic
surgery. In the United States, adolescents often form subcultures to
develop a shared youth identity. Alcoholics Anonymous offers support to
those suffering from alcoholism. But even as members of a subculture
band together, they still identify with and participate in the larger
society.
Sociologists distinguish subcultures from countercultures,
which are a type of subculture that rejects some of the larger
culture’s norms and values. In contrast to subcultures, which operate
relatively smoothly within the larger society, countercultures might
actively defy larger society by developing their own set of rules and
norms to live by, sometimes even creating communities that operate
outside of greater society.
Cults, a word derived from culture,
are also considered counterculture group. The group “Yearning for Zion”
(YFZ) in Eldorado, Texas, existed outside the mainstream and the
limelight, until its leader was accused of statutory rape and underage
marriage. The sect’s formal norms clashed too severely to be tolerated
by U.S. law, and in 2008, authorities raided the compound and removed
more than two hundred women and children from the property.
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/alamo-sociology/chapter/reading-pop-culture-subculture-and-cultural-change/
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