Task 1 Read the quotes, discuss your views with your partner,
and
then present their opinion to the class.
1 "To provide its happy people
with
perpetual* fun is now the deepest
purpose of Western civilization." – Jeremy Seabrook, English author
(1939 - ), Third World Network
2 "The media no longer ask those who know something
... to share
that
knowledge with the public. Instead they ask those who know nothing to
represent the ignorance of the public and, in so doing, to legitimate
it." – Serge Daney (1944–1992), French film critic
3 "Whoever controls the media controls the mind." – Jim Morrison,
American singer (1943–1971), The Doors
4 "What the mass media offer is not popular art, but
entertainment
which is intended to be consumed like food, forgotten, and replaced by
a new dish." – W.H. Auden, English poet (1907-1973) in The Dyer’s
Hand (1962)
5 "Music is banned in Khomeini’s Iran on the grounds
that it
stimulates
the brain. We’ve done him one better in the land of Coke and honey –
using music to put people’s brains to sleep. " – Dead Kennedys
(American punk band, 1978 - ) in Triumph of the Swill
6 "I think that we have created a new kind of person
in a way.
We have
created a child who will be so exposed to media that he will be lost to
his parents by the time he is 12." – David Bowie, English entertainer
(1947 - )
7 "The average American who spends six hours in
front of the TV
screen
can not distinguish between these fictional situations and reality. For
all too many Americans the real world has been replaced by the false
reality of the TV environment. The control of the opinion-forming media
is nearly monolithic." – Mohamed Raisudeen, 20thc author of Media,
Jihad & All That
8 "A properly functioning system of indoctrination
has a variety
of
tasks. Its primary target are the "stupid and ignorant masses". They
must be kept that way: marginalized and isolated. Ideally, each person
should be alone in front of the TV screen watching sports, soap operas,
or comedies, deprived of organizational structures that permit*
individuals lacking* resources to discover what they think and believe
in, to engage in interaction with others, to formulate their own
concerns and programs, and to act to realize them. This unfortunate
mass of the population is the proper target of the mass media and a
public education system focused on obedience and training in needed
skills, including the skill of repeating patriotic slogans on timely
occasions." – Noam Chomsky, American writer, linguist, dissident
(1928
- )
From
http:/www.newspeakdictionary.com/ot-quotes.html#QMedia; and
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com
Reading – Popular Culture: A Background
Popular culture studies is the
scholarly
investigation* of expressive
forms widely disseminated* in society. These materials include, but
are
not restricted to* products of mass media such as television, film,
print, and recording. Thus, popular culture studies may focus on media
genres such as situation comedies (sitcoms), film noir, best-selling
novels, or rap music. Other, non-mediated aspects of popular culture
would include such things as clothing styles, fads*, holidays and
celebrations, amusement parks, both amateur and professional sports,
and so forth.
Ideally, the study of these or any other popular materials should be
done holistically*, viewing them both aesthetically and also within the
social and cultural contexts in which the materials are created,
disseminated, interpreted, and used. In this way the study of popular
culture involves the use of methodologies from both the humanities and
the social sciences in the effort to interpret expressive cultural
forms, specifically those that are widely disseminated in a group (that
is, those that are popular) as part of dynamic social intercourse.
Popular culture scholars study these created, expressive, and artistic
materials as their primary data, much as literary scholars take the
novel or the sonnet as their primary data. In this way popular culture
studies are within the tradition of the humanities. However, popular
culture studies differs from traditional humanities studies in that it
recognizes* the existence of alternative systems of aesthetics which
guide* the creation of popular materials and the evaluation of those
materials by an audience.
Popular culture scholars apply this principle to popular arts such as
television programs, popular films, popular music, best-selling novels,
genre fiction such as mysteries or romances, and so on. The popular
culture scholar situates the discussion of any aspect of popular
culture within the larger context of the meanings and values of the
society within which it exists.
The Discipline of Popular Culture
A fundamental debate over the
essential nature of
popular materials
themselves exists. Some scholars equate* the materials of popular
culture to the mass media, and therefore maintain* that popular culture
did not exist prior to* the Industrial Revolution, the rise of a large
middle-class segment* of society, and the simultaneous* rise of rapid
printing. Other scholars use the term "popular culture" to refer to the
expressive materials of any group, large or small, pre-industrial or
post-industrial.
One might argue that the study of popular culture as a scholarly
discipline can be traced back* at least as far as the writings of
Giambattista Vico, who anticipated* today's cultural studies programs
as he attempted* to discover the ‘principles of humanity’ in his New
Science of 1775. However, most scholars agree that the last fifteen to
twenty years have seen a significant movement among scholars of all
backgrounds toward an awareness of* a large body of cultural expression
that has fallen outside of most research prior to that time.
Adapted from http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/popc/bkgrnd.html. Bowling
Green State University, Department of Popular Culture.
Task 2 Discuss and answer the following questions:
1) According to the definition of popular culture in the article (in
bold), what are some forms of pop culture in the Czech Republic?
2) Can studying the fashion trends of 14-year-old girls tell us
something important about society?
3) Can you give some examples of ‘primary data’ in this context?
Task 3 Icons are symbols or typical images of a nation’s or a
society’s popular culture. Discuss the following questions:
1) What are some of the icons of your country?
2) What are some of the icons of the following countries?
France - England - United States - Russia - Germany
3) Do you notice any patterns* or similarities?
Some Opinions on Pop Culture vs. High/Low Culture
Task 4 Read the following quotes and then discuss the questions
below.
“Low culture is based on marketing.
Low culture is
what you sell the
masses, and they rush out and buy the latest CD...because everybody's
doing it. And in two years' time it's in the dustbin - and quite
rightly so.” - Brian Sewell, Art critic
“I think the difference between high and popular culture is becoming
increasingly difficult to define... I'm sure that Damien Hirst's shark,
if it can be preserved in formaldehyde for another twenty, thirty years
will stand the test of time because it was a ground breaking piece of
art; nobody had done that before.” - Kim Evans, Executive Director,
Arts Council
“The definition of what is high and what is popular culture has changed
enormously over the last twenty, thirty years.” - Mark Thompson,
Director of Television, BBC
“I think there's a lot of nonsense talked about distinctions between
high culture and so-called* popular culture.” - Chris Smith MP, Culture
Secretary
1) How do you understand the terms ‘pop culture’, ‘high culture’, and
‘low culture’?
2) Do you make a distinction* between these terms?
3) Do you think that the terms ‘high’ and ‘low’ culture are out of date
and elitist*?
4) Can you think of some examples of ‘popular culture’?
5) Can you give some examples where high and low culture overlap?
Task 5 Answer the following questions: use your imagination!
1) Which person from popular culture would you most
like to meet?
Why?
2) What would you talk about with them?
3) Do you think that what you would discuss could change your opinion
of them?
4) What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of fame?
5) If you could be a celebrity just for a day, who would you be?
Discussion Questions
1) What are your personal reactions to graffiti?
2) Is graffiti an acceptable form of expression?
3) Do you think that graffiti is an art form?
4) Can you think of any examples of graffiti in your environment?
5) Does the Czech Republic have a problem with graffiti?
6) Should it be encouraged, controlled, or strictly prohibited?
Task 6 Complete the text using the following words:
Graffiti
People have been (1)
on walls as long as they have
been
building them. The term ‘Graffiti’ comes from the Italian verb
graffiare, meaning ‘to scratch.’ It covers a wide range of public
inscriptions, from the early (2)
on the walls of caves at
Lascaux to drawings quickly drawn on contemporary bathroom stalls. The
late-twentieth century has seen the (3)
of a market for
graffiti as an art form, although the majority of graffiti remains
unsolicited* and anonymous.
Historically, graffiti has been used mainly as a form of personal
communication. One of the earliest uses developed in the United States
among hobos* who rode the (4)
across the country in the first
decades of the twentieth century. The complicated symbolic language of
these transients was scratched* in (5)
on fence posts to
communicate the receptivity of the townspeople to future travellers.
During the 1940s the exterior walls of (6)
in Hispanic
communities in post-war Los Angeles were increasingly decorated with a
kind of marking subsequently called ‘old school.’ Before the advent of
spray paint, these black-and-white drawings were drawn in marker to
communicate the (7)
of neighbourhoods controlled by
rival
gangs.
Although graffiti (8)
during the 1960s, it was not
until the
1970s that it started attracting public attention as a serious social
problem. The visibility of graffiti had steadily been increasing, as
graffiti artists started using spray paint to cover larger areas more
(9)
than was previously possible.
By the
mid-1970s the main
target of graffiti artists had become the (10)
of the New York
City subway system. Throughout the decade, the city of New York fought
a battle with enterprising artists. Even as the transit authorities
struggled to remove the colourful paintings, New York graffiti was
achieving international recognition as part of a hip-hop culture that
included rap music and break dancing. Several films (11)
this
period, including Wild Style (1982) and Beat Street (1984).
Eventually, a coating* was developed that inhibited* the application of
spray paint onto the surfaces of trains, and in the 1980s a booming*
art market (12)
an interest in graffiti
marketed as an art
form. Several galleries in Manhattan began specializing in graffiti
art, and former graffiti artists such as Keith Haring, who got his
start doing quick marker (13)
in his characteristic outline
style, and Jean-Michel Basquiat became instant celebrities, with works
selling for hundreds of thousands of dollars. The public fascination
with graffiti faded by the end of the decade, as graffiti became
increasingly (14)
with the activity of urban
gangs.
Adapted from a text by Deborah Broderson in St.
James
Encyclopedia of
Popular Culture, Gale Group, 2002.
Popular Film
Task 7 Complete the table below using some of the following
adjectives:
Moving/Tear-jerking
producing strong emotions, often of sadness
Violent
includes lots of scenes with fighting and death
Powerful
has a big effect on our emotions
Gripping
exciting and very interesting
Slow
boring
(Remember, you can use quite/really/very/extremely to alter the
strength of the adjective e.g. quite moving, really/very moving,
extremely moving).
Film
Type of film
Subtitled or
dubbed?
Description of film
1.
The Godfather
Action, thriller
Violent, gripping, exciting,
fast-moving
2.
3.
4.
Task 8 Now discuss the following questions:
1) What are some of your favourite films?
2) What type of film do you usually prefer?
3) Is there any type of film that you refuse to see?
4) Who are some of your favourite actors? Which films have they been
in? Try to provide a detailed description of this person.
Adapted from: English Vocabulary in Use, Stuart
Redman, CUP
1997, pp.
148-149.
Grammar – Practice with Adverbs
Task 9 Find the mistakes, if there are any.
The films at the festival will be simultaneous
translated.
All the guests were welcomed at the reception
warmly.
The study was done in a holistically way.
The material of his suit feels very smoothly.
Although the children were enthusiastically, the
new fad was received cold by the parents.
He stayed up all night and hardly worked to get
his project done on time.
The singer’s voice sounded very clearly at last
night’s concert.
She looked beautifully in her designer evening
dress.
The audience responded very appreciatively.
Although he looked hardly at the photo, he
didn’t recognize hardly anyone.
The musician played so romantic on his guitar.
He looked at the project from a scholarly and
aesthetically point of view.
Vocabulary
1.
*perpetual
ustavičný
2.
*to permit; to allow
dovolit
3.
*to lack something
nemít, postrádat
4.
*scholarly investigation
vědecké, teoretické bádání
5.
*to
disseminate
rozšířit se
6.
*to be
restricted to
být omezen na
7.
*fad,
trend
trend, pobláznění
8.
*holistic
holistický, zdůrazňující
celostnost, pokládající celek za něco vyššího než
souhrn součástí