Pop Culture or How the World is Fascinated by Nothing
For all we know, pop culture aka the culture of the people consists of a mainstream form of entertainment, of popular art and lifestyle that have appeared along with mass media and mass consumption in Western civilization and across the world for now over a century. Pop culture is the equivalent of the ancient folklores, which before mass media appeared, were specific to the people and their respective region and differentiated from elitist ''high culture" reserved for the privileged classes of society.
A notable aspect in the evolution of pop culture over the years is how it has been vulgarized greatly over the past century, from a higher quality stream of creative flow towards something much more superficial and only instinctively appealing. At the start of mass media for example, the movies were focused on the quality of narrative, on character and relationships, and on the quality of writing and dialog. When we watch some of the new commercial movies, sometimes we wonder where this has gone. To some at least, it can be a complete world of instant gratification but longer term boredom.
Music is an obvious example for this. Not that long ago, when records were first manufactured, Classical music used to form the bulk of the music industry. Records were reserved to an educated elite, who recognized the genius of its creators and performers and who understood the value of pieces and their performance and was therefore willing to spend their money on it. When rock music appeared, music consumption evolved and music as an art was suddenly vulgarized to a lower type of consumption good, still respectably valuable, but not as intellectual, not as elitist. Demand increased and prices dropped. The whole western population would buy records and the people saw the value in the genius of rock and pop idols. This pop phenomenon has endured strongly and has amplified itself over time and throughout all forms of art and media until our age.
We all know that mass media has changed the face of culture, worldwide, probably for the good since overall, the cultural intellect has spread to the global population and on average, the human spirit has probably elevated itself to a high level of cultural awareness. Since the dawn of the twenty-first century however, a further kind of vulgarization has appeared. The new generation, roughly 25 year olds and below, are now not even interested in specific icons of a particular form of art or entertainment. We don't see the value in talent in as a logical way as it used to be seen and recognized. What we see today is the quality of an approach to an audience, the context of culture. Stars are blind and don't necessarily have a link to their art. It's all down the how they are marketed, and they may be eligible to be on our playlists.
Examples are numerous and there is no need to mention this or that, it's obvious that music is now perceived as a consumption good among many, and that the magic and idolatry of rock is now far gone. For better of for worse, brands and labels have taken over geniuses and icons.
Some refer to this as dumbing down or the age of the Post-Intellectual era. Clearly, there's a great need for education, if not, awareness in terms of culture. While we have never been so spoiled, we have never been so bright either, and so quickly able to learn, progress and to act. Additionally, we have never had suck an easy access to information and to immediate production of cultural goods.
In fact, in the same way mass media initially vulgarized the idea of consuming art, listening to music, watching TV or going to the movies, the web aka the new generation in mass media has vulgarized even the concept of creating art. Also, the value is briefly transferring itself from artists to products. When the artist, and the medium are becoming commodities, what's left is the result of those commodities: the product, whether it is a track, a film, an article, a book, a concert, anything you may think of... What's more is that we have direct access to all of the above. Slowly, art itself is becoming a commodity. It is free, it is simple, it is direct.
Pop culture is everywhere, from its creation to its consumption, it has overtaken every home in the world, and the world itself has become a spoiled audience, hungry for cheap commodities, passionate about nothing.
Sounds new? It is. What's next? What's after the vulgarization and demystification of anything creative? Other forms of creativity... Forms that will not be seen as commodities and with which people will be surprised again, start dreaming again from a deeply rooted standpoint, rather than an instinctive envy. Most certainly... in the meantime, we are here today and waiting, creating, diversifying, experimenting, exchanging, consuming, flying, knowing that most of all, what matters is the necessity to realize that what's there cannot be taken for granted, has infinite potential and is all the reasons to remain positive.
Labels: art, culture, generation, media, movies, music, philosophy, pop, web

12 Comments:
A good out writtin view Olivier,
All I have to add to this is I'm behind everything you write here.
Joanie
Olivier, having been immersed in this pop-culture for several years I can agree with what you say on the mostpart and I like the fluidity with which you write. It is a shame that the media has such a untamable control over the public; you are indeed right, we live in a quick fix society where reality tv bands, celebrities and anyone involved in the public eye are idolised and then dropped within a year or two, and they are all falling victim quite deservedly to this pop-culture you outline. I would however, like to note that already we are seeing a revolution within the minorities and that always, eventually is impressionable on the masses in the same way that fashion trends take time to filter their way to the public as a whole. Talented musicians are starting to resurface, and I would have to disagree that rock is dead. It's just laying dormant, whilst the general masses have their affair with pop, then they will realise what a terrible mistake they have made, and come back begging for their dignity, and pretending they never enjoyed it! Remember the riots against disco of the 1970's? What we need is talent, and there are plenty of revolutionists out there, like yourself, who are getting sick of this pop culture you write about.
Well my friend, all this is true.
In my recent travels as a musician, specifically the one to Tokyo, it was quite shocking; the brutal and base nature that marketing has become. In america it is more subtle, attacking a demographic's very foundations of Id and wrenching on Ego. The only option is to become a Ezra Pound, Or Gertrude Stein, using our individual social influences to champion what we still feel is powerful and true in the arts.
Sincerely,
Shawn Kyle Beauville
myspace.com/rockandrolll
Great blog Oliver! I'm looking forward to reading more about how you perceive the world. Keep it up :)
When a films' merit is weighed and measured solely on how much money it brings in, one should not wonder why marketing has replaced quality, content, and substance. Theatre has also been inflicted... Well stated Oliver. Andy Warhol tried to warn us...
Well said!
But eventhough some of us realize that we are constantly attacked by pop culture's in-your-face attitude, how would we really know when we will truly revert back to our roots of appreciating art (in all its forms) for what it is? And even if you can identify a change in this cultural revolution, how do you know it's not just another marketing gimmick to push people even further into, yet more, consumerism?
No matter how much we want to stay true to these fading ideals of quality and staying among the elite who supposedly truly appreciate art, we are still part of this vulgarization of pop culture...I mean, we're using MySpace for pete's sake :p
This is true. Today's culture is at such a low intellectual point that its embarassing; no one thinks. In the Golden Age of Greece philosophers were the celebrities of the masses, people who stretched their mind to the furthest extent. Can the average person today even name five living well known philosophers? No one thinks at all anymore.
Its about people who don't want to take the time to think, really think, learn something new, keep in touch with what really matters and make their intellect grow. In today's world is easier to numb ourserlves with superfluous things and others people problems (see reality shows), they rather do that and go with the flow instead of fight to find out better things to do. To discover. To invent.
pop culture rocks! specially when flashing genitals like terry richardson does!
carissa: I dig philosophy (minor in my first undergrad) BUT...now we are way more educated than the most educated greeks...that is the difference.
everything is beautiful. pop art is everything.
i am behind you a 100 percent on everything u said.
Post a Comment
<< Home