Popular Culture: Introductory PerspectivesRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2012 M08 3 - 320 páginas Pop culture surrounds us. Its products are the movies we watch, the music we listen to, and the books we read; they are on our televisions, phones, and computers. We are its fickle friend, loving to hate it and hating to love it. But what, exactly, is it? Popular Culture: Introductory Perspectives seeks to answer that question by exploring our human desire for meaning and the ways that pop culture embodies meaning for us. In this text, Marcel Danesi delves into the social structures that have led to the emergence and spread of pop culture, showing how it validates our common experiences and offering a variety of perspectives on its many modes of delivery into our everyday lives. The second edition offers analysis of current contexts for popular culture, including the rise and dominance of the digital global village through technology and social media, as well as up-to-date examples that connect with today’s students. |
Contenido
Chapter One What Is Pop Culture? | 1 |
Chapter Two Explaining Pop Culture | 35 |
Chapter Three Print | 65 |
Chapter Four Radio | 93 |
Chapter Five Music | 117 |
Chapter Six Cinema and Video | 141 |
Chapter Seven Television | 171 |
Chapter Eight Advertising Branding and Fads | 195 |
Chapter Nine Pop Language | 215 |
Chapter Ten Forever Pop | 229 |
Glossary | 247 |
255 | |
Online Resources | 267 |
269 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
advertising American appeal archetypes artists audiences Beatles became become broadcasting called carnival celebrities channels chapter characters cinema comedy comic book communications contemporary counterculture created defined dolls early Elvis Presley entertainment example Facebook fads fashion fictional figures film find first forms genre global village hero hip-hop human icons images influence Internet jazz lifestyle magazines mass McLuhan medium modem-day moral panic movie mythic narrative newspapers novel performances pop culture pop culture studies pop language pop music Popular Culture postmodern profane programs pulp fiction punk punk rock radio reality television records reflected Roaring Twenties rock and roll rock music role serial sexual showcased sitcom Snoop Dogg social society songs specific spectacle stage stars started stories style symbols television textspeak theater theory thriller traditional trends video game viewers websites women words York youth YouTube