Folk and Pop culture Italic intro, p. 201. Human Geography Chapter 7 Folk and Popular Culture: Diversity and Uniformity Insert figure 7.21 © 1997 IMS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cultural Landscape: Folk Housing
Advertisements

The Elements of Culture
 Constantly changing  Based in large, heterogeneous groups of people  Based mainly in urban areas  Material goods mass-produced by machines in factories.
Why does globalization of popular culture cause problems?
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster.
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster.
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely “Radical” Scot, with Kilt and Classic Surfboard.
Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture
 Write Out : › When does the diffusion of pop culture become a problems  Agenda: › Weekend Recap › Buzz word Quiz › Note Quiz from Friday – Period 10.
What is Culture? Part II. Problems with the Globalization of Culture Often Destroys Folk Culture – or preserves traditions as museum pieces or tourism.
Chapter 4 Folk and Popular Culture. Origins and Diffusion of Folk & Popular Cultures Origin of folk and popular cultures –Origin of folk music –Origin.
CHAPTER 4: FOLK AND POPULAR CULTURE
Tell me about your day.. Someone your age living in Nigeria, what do you think their day is like today?
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster.
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster.
Folk and Popular Culture Chapter 4
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Chapter 4 Culture Folk Culture. HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Insert figure 2.19b Photo credit: © Getty RF.
* Challenge: One uniquely and complete American Cultural Practice or Tradition.
CULTURE: PART 2 END OF POP VS. LOCAL FOLK CULTURE.
Culture Cultural Geography – Looking at the distribution of cultural traits. d&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
Threats to Folk Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
Chapter 4 Folk and Popular Culture. Folk & Popular Culture I.Intro A. Culture combines values, material artifacts, & political institutions B. Habit vs.
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY. Unit 3 Roots & Meaning of Culture Insert figure 2.19b Photo credit: © Getty RF.
Folk and Popular Culture
Chapter 4 “Folk and Popular Culture”. “Culture is the agent, the natural area is the medium, the cultural landscape is the result’ - Carl Sauer Culture.
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster.
Unit 3 Culture Playing For Change
Cultures in the Cultural Landscape
What is culture?. culture is….. Learned, not biological Transmitted within a society to next generations by imitation, tradition, instruction.
Folk and Popular Culture Race, Gender & Ethnicity Chapter 4 & 5.
Human Geography Jerome D. Fellmann Arthur Getis Judith Getis Jon C. Malinowski.
Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar.
Chapter 4 “Folk and Popular Culture”. “Culture is the agent, the natural area is the medium, the cultural landscape is the result’ - Carl Sauer Culture.
FOLK AND POPULAR CULTURE. ORIGIN OF CULTURE Folk Culture Isolated, clustered Topics involve every day life, environment, beliefs Passed down orally Traditions.
Folk and Pop Culture Key Issues 2, 3, and 4.
HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Jerome D. Fellmann Mark Bjelland Arthur Getis Judith Getis.
Folk vs. Popular Culture
CHAPTER 4: FOLK & POPULAR CULTURE. CULTURAL BASICS Culture – values, material artifacts, & political institutions (Chp. 1) Emphasis on material artifacts.
WHAT IS CULTURE?. CULTURE IS…  Learned, not biological  Transmitted within a society to next generations by imitation, tradition, instruction.
UNIT 3: Cultural Geo. Culture….. Is learned Diffuses (spreads)
Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture
Tell me about your day..
Folk and Popular Culture
Why is Folk Culture Clustered?
Folk Culture vs Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Do Now: Music! FOOD! Socializing!
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Unit 3 Culture.
Comparing Folk and Pop Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Cultural Concerns The end of folk culture?.
Folk and Popular Culture
Review: Culture and Identity
Folk and Popular Culture
Important Terminology
Folk and Popular Culture
Folk and Popular Culture
Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture
Cultural Landscape: Folk Housing
Chapter 4: Folk and Popular Culture
Presentation transcript:

Folk and Pop culture Italic intro, p. 201

Human Geography Chapter 7 Folk and Popular Culture: Diversity and Uniformity Insert figure 7.21 © 1997 IMS Communications Ltd/Capstone Design. All Rights Reserved

Human Geography 11e Folk Culture Folk and Popular Culture: Are they Polar Opposites? Folk Life refers to: - Collective heritage of institutions - Stable and close knit Usually an isolated, rural community …The Amish for instance. Tradition controls Resistance to change The homemade and handmade dominate in tools, food, and music * Buildings erected without architect or blueprint and use locally available building materials

Material Culture Physical, visible things Tools, buildings, instruments, and furniture Collectively material culture comprises the built environment Non-Material Culture The intangible part Mentifacts Sociofacts Oral traditions Songs Customary behavior Elements of Folk Culture

What is Folklore? Definition of Folklore –Why is “informal” important? –What is “expressive” culture? -Why “small groups” What does he mean by “elite culture” Folklore part 1 Human Geography 10e

What is Folklore? Human Geography 10e

What is Folklore? Definition of Folklore –Why is “informal” important? –What is “expressive” culture? -Why “small groups” What does he mean by “elite culture” Folklore part 1 Human Geography 10e

What is Folklore Part 2? Definition of Vernacular culture -Language, Architecture, Music, Food

What is Folklore Part 3? Difference between: –Elite culture, Commercial culture, Folk culture

Anglo American Hearths Early European colonists established footholds along the East Coast Relocation of concepts and artifacts from Europe Early European colonists brought with them clear ideas of what tools they needed, how they should fashion their clothes, cook their food, and practice their religion (menitfacts and sociofacts to shape the artifacts of the “new world”)

Anglo American Hearths European material and nonmaterial culture frequently underwent immediate modification in the New World –Climates and soils were often different from their homelands –European colonists modified tools and ideas as they adapted and adjusted to different materials and terrains

Human Geography 11e Architectural Diffusions Three Source Regions 1. New England Vernacular houses are heavily framed structures with steep roofs and massive central chimneys 2. Middle Atlantic The most influential of the North American housing styles Log cabins, later carried into Appalachia 2. Middle Atlantic The one room deep I house with two rooms on each floor Two-story floor plan with four rooms on each floor 3. Southern Heat and humidity were an environmental problem requiring distinctive housing solutions

Human Geography 11e Folk Building Traditions 1. The Northern Hearths –The Lower St. Lawrence Valley –Southern New England 2. The Middle Atlantic Hearths –The Delaware Valley –Chesapeake Bay 3. The Southern Hearths The Southern Tidewater The Mississippi Delta 4. Interior and Western Hearths

U.S. House Types by Region Fig : Small towns in different regions of the eastern U.S. have different combinations of five main house types.

Folk Building Traditions Native societies established types of housing, means of construction, and use of materials appropriate to their economic and family needs and materials available to them.

Terraced Rice Fields, Thailand Hogan, Monument Valley, AZ Cohokia Mounds, Illinois Folk Culture and the Land

Pueblo Ruins Taos NM and Mesa Verde CO Human Geography 10e

Modern Adaptations Hotel Loretto, Sante Fe, NM Single Family Home, Phoenix AZ

Human Geography 11e The Passing of Folk Cultural Regionalism Decline during 20 th century Urban – Rural contrasts Widespread adoption of new inventions

True Folk Culture Today? North Sentinelese Contact w/ true "Folk" culture Contact w/ true "Folk" culture Amish True Folk Culture in AmericaTrue Folk Culture in America

True Folk Culture Today? Anishinabe With Reservations With Reservations –Examples of Folk Culture preserved –Examples of Commercial Culture on Reservations today? –Examples of Elite culture resisted and adopted Human Geography 10e

Human Geography 11e Popular Culture Urban Ever changing The general mass of people Global uniformity

Human Geography 11e Patterns of Popular Culture Popular versus mass culture Placelessness –The replacement of local identity and variety with a homogeneous and standardized landscape Insert figure 7.24 © Michael Dwyer/Stock Boston

Human Geography 11e National Uniformities and Globalization International standardization Expanding markets Appeal to local tastes Local resistance Insert figure 7.22 Jon C. Malinowski/Human Landscape Studio

Human Geography 11e The Shopping Mall Consumption as a way of life Changing trends: Enclosed malls versus lifestyle centers Quick diffusion of fashion and style Big box stores Regional Patterns of Popular Culture Sports: viewing and participation Drink and music Globalization of Reggae Vernacular regions

Folk and Popular Culture Woman with Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, with Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster

Beijing, China 2012

Popular Culture Fashion: as a status symbols in many regions including Asia and Russia despite longstanding folk traditions. Media, Sports, Entertainment

Diffusion of TV, 1954– 2004 Fig. 4-14: Television has diffused widely since the 1950s, but some areas still have low numbers of TVs per population.

Diffusion of Internet Internet spread

Popular Culture Effects on Landscape: breeds homogenous, “placeless” (Relph, 1976), landscape  Complex network of roads and highways  Commercial Structures tend towards ‘boxes’  Dwellings may be aesthetically suggestive of older folk traditions Planned and Gated Communities more and more common Disconnect with landscape: indoor swimming pools, desert surfing.

Surfing in Tempe, Arizona Are places still tied to local landscapes?

Swimming Pool, West Edmonton Mall, Canada McDonald’s, Tokyo, Japan McDonald’s, Jerusalem

Problems with the Globalization of Culture Often Destroys Folk Culture – or preserves traditions as museum pieces or tourism gimmicks.  Mexican Mariachis as Cruise Line Entertainment Satellite Television, Baja California

Western Media Imperialism?  U.S., Britain, and Japan dominate worldwide media.  Think, Pair Share: Identify three specific problems that may arise as a result of media imperialism. Problems with the Globalization of Popular Culture

Western Media Imperialism?  U.S., Britain, and Japan dominate worldwide media.  Glorified consumerism, violence, sexuality, and militarism?  U.S. (Networks and CNN) and British (BBC) news media provide/control the dissemination of information worldwide.  These networks are unlikely to focus or provide third world perspective on issues important in the LDCs. Problems with the Globalization of Popular Culture

Environmental Problems with Cultural Globalization Accelerated Resource Use through Accelerated Consumption Furs: minx, lynx, jaguar, kangaroo, whale, sea otters (18 th Century Russians) fed early fashion trends Inefficient over-consumption of Meats (10:1), Poultry (3:1), even Fish (fed other fish and chicken) by meat- eating pop cultures  Mineral Extraction for Machines, Plastics and Fuel  New Housing and associated energy and water use.  Golf courses use valuable water and destroy habitat worldwide. 7 billion people living the “American Dream” Pollution: waste from fuel generation and discarded products, plastics, marketing and packaging materials

“Progress?”

“They’re growing houses in the fields between the towns.” - John Gorka, Folk Singer

Beijing, China Palm Springs, CA

Fiji

Marboloro Man in Egypt

Critical Thinking: Think, Pair Share 1.Why should society preserve folk culture traditions? 2.What are some examples of folk culture traditions that have become part of the popular culture? 3.Besides housing, what other folk traditions might be useful to distinguish among regions in the United States? 4. How can sports be used as a window to other aspects of a society’s culture?