Popular film

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    week’s reading, it addresses popular culture through the critical approach. Unlike the functionalist approach, the critical approval focuses on the darker factors of popular culture. For this particular article, it will examine the effects of mass media on popular culture and how it shapes the way the audience perceives particular situations. In the David Grazian’s Mix It Up Chapter 3, “Welcome to the Machine: A Critical Approach to Popular Culture” will examine popular culture from the critical approach

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    provides a sophisticated avenue to explore this topic. When applying gender theory to Schindler’s List, scholars should modify their expectations in light of Zelizer’s critique that popular culture cannot mirror the Holocaust ‘as-it-happened’. To resolve some of these challenges researchers can ‘triangulate’ popular representations with photographs to ensure that their scholarship remains rooted in historical fact. Ultimately, provided that researchers are cognizant of the limitations inherent within

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    AMERICAN BELIEFS AND VALUES There are some ideals and values rooted in the country’s history and spread by media (films, TV) that many Americans share. 1. Individualism – has strong roots in America. Individualism is understood not only as self reliance but also as economic self-sufficiency. It has been a central theme in American history. Many years ago most Americans were farmers whose success depended not on cooperation with others but on their ability to confront the hardships of land

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    resulting in a humiliating defeat for the U.S, affected culture in ways both large and miniscule. These effects include influence on novels and films, changes in the conductivity of mass media, and a split of culture within the U.S. Over the duration of the Vietnam War popular culture tended to deal with the war indirectly, certainly including it in novels and films, yet perhaps not intending to incorporate it in works. There are many works which reflect issues in American society and issues brought about

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    other cultures globally. 2. Apply Chidester’s theory that pop culture can do the work of religion (from the “Church of Baseball” chapter) and explain how we could theorize a “Church of the iPhone” using specific examples. Chidester’s theory that popular culture can do the work of religion can be applied

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    Feminism and popular culture have interacted over the years, each influencing and responding to the other. The media has been a cause of feminist protests, especially because of their representations of men and women’s lives. These portrayals can have an impact on society, as because of their mass distribution, they have the capability to influence the public’s perspective on gender relations and feminist issues. The views of feminism and the ideas that the movement was currently emphasizing can

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    Feminism and popular culture have always interacted, each influencing and responding to the other. Over time, popular culture has portrayed various ideas that feminists have reacted to in protest, including ideas about standards for men and women’s lives. These representations can have an impact on society, as because of their mass distribution, they have the capability to show characters living in either realistic or fantasy situations. However, even in fictional settings, the context surrounding

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    The term ‘popular culture’ holds different meanings depending on who’s defining it and the context of use. It is generally recognized as the vernacular or people’s culture that predominates in a society at a point in time. As Brummett explains in Rhetorical Dimensions of Popular Culture, pop culture involves the aspects of social life most actively involved in by the public. As the ‘culture of the people’, popular culture is determined by the interactions between people in their everyday activities:

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    cloning must be weighed and examined. Therefore, the question arises, “How do consumers form their opinions about cloning?” As a Communications major, I am aware that popular culture is one powerful way that ideas about controversial topics are communicated. Therefore this question becomes more specifically: What can popular movies (like Jurassic Park) tell us about people’s attitudes toward cloning and the forces shaping those attitudes? Once this question is answered, we may be able to judge

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    of pop culture, especially in movies we think of celebrities, fashion, and tag lines. While Do the Right Thing (DTRT) by Spike Lee has maybe one of those, but its powerful themes, characters and presentation turned it into one of the most notable films ever. It heavily employs the interactionist approach by showing different cultures interacting with one another, and making major points of their own stereotypical racial biases, bigotry and degrees of discrimination, as well as the initial signs of

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