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1. High Culture versus Popular Culture
1.1 Intro: What is culture? Sociological roots
(Durkheim, Weber)
 Definition: Shared beliefs, values, norms, and social actions that give meaning in an (otherwise) meaningless world.
 Human condition: Unlike other animals (instinct-driven), humans are culture-creating beings.
 Social function: Culture creates order and meaning (e.g. religion as shared beliefs + rituals).
 Durkheim: Being outside culture = anomie (madness, loneliness, dissatisfaction, higher risk of suicide).
 Culture as a social construct: Not about “what is real” but how we define ourselves.
o We shape culture/culture shapes us: language evolves socially; inventing your own makes you “outside culture.”
o Culture liberates & limits: Enables expression/connection but also imposes rules (e.g. correct language use in
exams).
 Variation: Culture differs across time, place, and social groups (e.g. Flanders 100 years ago vs. today).
 In-group cohesion vs. out-group conflict: Creates cohesion within, exclusion/conflict outside.
 Studying culture: Neutral, not about truth/falsehood.
 Methods: Mainly qualitative (meanings are hard to measure via surveys, easier with interviews), though quantitative is
possible.

1.2 High culture (HC) vs. popular culture (PC) - Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process
 Analysis: Cultural elite/aristocracy shaped Western cultural standards (values, manners, taste, style) since the Middle Ages.
 Elite view of PC: Seen as uncivilized, vulgar, uncontrolled, anarchistic (same disdain toward non-Western cultures).
o Example: French Revolution (1789) – elites looked down on the masses.
 Distinction: HC maintains difference via high art, refined manners, and emotional control.
o Elite obsessed with discipline (e.g. Cambridge etiquette as status markers).
o Contrast: Middle Ages = impulsive sexual/violent behaviour.
 Trickling down: Over time, ordinary people adopt elite standards (e.g. sex/violence became taboo).
 Spiraling up: Overall rise in “civilization” (greater self-control, refinement).
 Key tension: Ongoing opposition between HC and PC; HC continues to set the “standard.”

Cultural elite (High culture / Highbrow) Ordinary people (Popular culture / Lowbrow)
 Art, abstract art → shows refined taste.  Folklore, realistic art.
 Civilized: rational, controlled, not showing emotions.  Uncivilized: raw, emotional, uncontrolled.
 Visible in dress, posture, and faces.  Shown through quarrels, accidents, crying children.
Core idea: High culture = refined, abstract, emotionless; Popular culture = realistic, emotional, expressive.

1.3 High culture vs. ‘mass (media) culture’
 Continuity: Still elite disdain for “ordinary” people.
 Shift: Now based on media consumption (seen as vulgar/problematic).

20th century: Rise of mass media
 1920s: Golden Age of Hollywood → mass consumption of film, radio, advertising, celebrities.
 Celebrities (e.g. Ingrid Bergman, Marilyn Monroe) reshape culture → suddenly society/culture changes through mass media
 Elite concerns: Mass media seen as a threat to art, values, and lifestyle.
o Classical art (music, ballet, literature) “under threat.”
o Audiences = passive, happy consumers.

Critical Theory about the “culture industry” – Horkheimer & Adorno (1944)
 Elitist critique:
o Standardization: Hollywood formulas repeated; art loses authenticity.
o Commodification: True art = authentic, not for sale; film = commercial product.
o Passive audiences: Masses “enchanted,” living in false consciousness.
o Decline of culture: End of real art, philosophy, literature?

,Other intellectual critiques:
 Walter Benjamin (1935): Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction → loss of authenticity, aura.
 Herbert Marcuse (1968): One-Dimensional Man → media + capitalism reduce thought/behavior.
 Neil Postman (1984): Amusing Ourselves to Death → entertainment dominates public discourse → risk of “culture-death.”
 Neal Gabler (1998): Life: The Movie → reality filtered through film imagery (impossible to see NY without Hollywood
associations).

1.4 The relevance of studying media culture
 Historically excluded/seen as trivial in academia (linked to cultural inequality, Bourdieu: cultural capital & distinction).
 Since 1970s/80s: focus on media culture as everyday meaning-making.

Key approaches:
 Text & audience studies: What meanings do individuals/groups assign to media?
 Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (1964–2002):
o Critique of passive audience models (behaviourism, psychology, neo-Marxism).
o Stuart Hall (1980), Encoding/Decoding model: Audiences actively interpret texts (readings vary by ideology,
gender, etc.).
 John Fiske (2010): Understanding Popular Culture
o Culture is active, not sold “ready-made” to the masses.
o Popular culture is created by the people, not simply imposed by the industry.
Takeaway: Importance lies not in judging good/bad, but in analysing the meanings people make from media.

1.5 The societal relevance of studying media culture - Sociological background
 Since 1960s/70s: erosion of traditional cultural values (church, ideology, politics).
 Pillarization (1950s): strong alignment with social/religious “pillars” (socialist, liberal, religious)

 Today: tradition less binding → identity becomes reflexive.
Self-identity:
o Reflexive project (Giddens) → individuals define who they are (partner, career, friends) rather than tradition.
o Multiple choice biography (Beck) → not one fixed path but choice-based life trajectories.
o Community: from traditional to “light communities of choice.”
Conclusion: Even as tradition declines, popular media culture now plays a crucial role in shaping identity, community, and society.
Studying it reveals how meaning, belonging, and identity are constructed in contemporary life.

, 2. Ideology and hegemony
2.1 Intro: The four dimensions of media sociology
Media sociology studies media in a societal context (different from media psychology, which focuses on individual
cognitive/behavioral effects).
1. Media technology – infrastructure shaping culture (film, TV, social media, games).
o McLuhan: “the medium is the message.”
2. Media industry – political economy: organizations producing media and exploiting audiences.
3. Media content – cultural narratives that reflect & shape society.
4. Media audiences – people interpret and appropriate texts, guided by gender, class, ethnicity, etc.

Ideology
 Set of beliefs/values shaping how people see the world.
 Influences views on politics, society, culture.

Hegemony
 Dominance of one group through consent, not just force.
 Certain ideas become the “norm” (e.g. consumerism, individualism).
 Makes alternative views less visible.

Media & culture
 Media texts (fiction or not) reflect and shape society’s norms/values.
 They show cultural narratives, even when original/creative.
 Audiences consume and internalize these values.
 Ex: Mocro Maffia → fiction, but reflects issues of crime and drugs in society.

2.2 Media and Inequality in Neo-Marxism & Neo-Liberalization
Neo-Marxism: Media & Inequality
 Marx: Economy = basis, Culture/Ideology = superstructure.
o Inequality in capitalism: workers exploited by owners.
o Ideological hegemony: dominant ideas benefit the powerful.
o False consciousness: lower classes accept inequality as “natural”.
o Function ideology = conceals inequality and hides exploitation (e.g. child labour in clothes/phones).

 Neo-Marxists (Gramsci, Althusser):
o Shift focus from economy → culture/ideology.
o Inequality not only about class, but also gender, race, ethnicity.
o Ideology spreads via state apparatuses (schools, journalism, media).
o Mass media reproduces dominant ideology → normalizes inequality.
o Research agenda: analyse media texts for hidden ideologies & inequality.
o Political goal: emancipation & equality for minorities.
 Examples in media:
o Gender roles: men superior, women objectified/sexualized.
o Heteronormativity: heterosexuality = “normal”; queer identities marginalized.

Neo-Liberalism as Ideology
 Since 1980s (Thatcher, Reagan → Clinton, Blair).
 From one political choice → hegemonic worldview.
 Core ideas:
o Free market, minimal state, global capitalism.
o Individual responsibility for success/failure.
o Disciplining the self (mind/body) → “you can do it”, constant competition.
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