Title: Popular culture
1Popular culture
- Popular Culture Regions
- Diffusion in Popular Culture
- The Ecology of Popular Culture
- Cultural Integration in Popular Culture
- Landscapes of Popular Culture
2Ecology of popular culture
- Popular culture may seem less directly tied to
the physical environment than folk culture - Cyberplace, Virtual ecology
- Adaptive strategies have enormous potential for
producing ecological disasters
3Environmental influence
- The physical environment still can exert an
influence on members of popular culture even
with their loss of close ties to nature - Some natural hazards are actually intensified
- Millions of city dwellers live astride the major
earthquake zone in California - Popularity of seaside residences greatly
increases dwelling susceptible to hurricane
destruction along the Gulf Coast - Epidemic diseases can spread more rapidly along
modern transportation networks
4Environmental influence
- How weather may affect a sports popularity
- Is greater popularity of basketball in the North
partly because of cold winters? - Does cold weather favor bowling and ice hockey,
explaining their popularity in northern states
and Canada? - Is it mere chance that major college football
bowl games are all played in Sunbelt States? - Over 80 percent of the College Baseball World
Series winners, in the past 50 years, have been
teams from the Sunbelt
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6Environmental influence
- Why climatic influence on different sports is
waning - Huge covered stadiums make it possible to play
football and baseball indoors - Artificial wave-making machines permit
surfboarding in Arizonas desert
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8Environmental influence
- Japans Seagaia Ocean Dome at Miyazaki on the
island of Kyushu - Three story structure offers indoor surfing
- Computer-controlled wave-making machine
- Temperature remains at 84F all year around
- Worlds largest retractable roof permits fresh
air in perfect weather - Has palm trees and sandy beaches
- Has an enormous waterslide and 17 restaurants
9Environmental influence
- La Laporte Ski Dome, near Tokyo, Japan
- Stands 25 stories high
- Provides year-round skiing for 2,000 customers at
a time - Ski runs are the length of five football fields
10Environmental influence
- The popular way of life has become a high-energy
consuming culture - Even devices of diffusion require large amounts
of electricity and gasoline - Labor-saving machines add to insatiable need for
fossil fuels and other energy supplies - If energy costs rise, we may reach a point where
many aspects of popular culture can no longer be
maintained
11Impact on the Environment
- Popular culture makes heavy demands on ecosystems
- Since World War II, leisure time and recreational
activities have increased greatly in developed
countries - Much time is spent in some space-consuming time
outside cities - Demand for wilderness recreation zones has
risen sharply in the last 25 years - No end to the increase is in sight
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13Environmental ImpactSan Felipe, Mexico
- Prior to the advent of dune buggies and
all-terrain vehicles (ATVs), a rich variety of
sea birds inhabited the beaches of this fishing
community.
14Environmental ImpactSan Felipe, Mexico
- In the past decade, San Felipe has become a
tourist mecca, especially popular with ATV
enthusiasts. - Driving through a pelican colony seems like great
fun to these tourists.
15Impact on the Environment
- Massive presence of people in recreational areas
results in damage to physical environment - National parks suffer from traffic jams,
residential congestion, litter, and noise
pollution - Off-road vehicles have caused soil loss and
long-term soil deterioration - As few as several hundred hikers can beat down
trails - Vegetation is altered
- Erosion is encouraged
- Wildlife diminished
- The more humans cluster in cities and suburbs,
the greater their impact on open areas
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17Impact on the Environment
- Reactions to the recreational tourist boom
- Some countries have made natural areas more
accessible, causing them to become crowded, and
damaged - Others, including the United States, have drawn a
distinction between national park tourism and
wilderness areas - Access to many wild districts is now restricted
- Some national parks restrict access by automobile
and camper - For most of the countryside, recreational assault
continues - Enormous demand for refuse dumps
- Generated by cities
- Refuse is altering the ecology of many rural areas
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19Popular culture
- Popular Culture Regions
- Diffusion in Popular Culture
- The Ecology of Popular Culture
- Cultural Integration in Popular Culture
- Landscapes of Popular Culture
20The convergence hypothesis
- We are supposedly converging in our cultural
makeup, becoming more alike - In 1790 a more pronounced regionalization of
peoples given names existed than in 1968
21Cultural IntegrationLane County, Pennsylvania
- Lane County is part of the Pennsylvania Dutch
ethnic homeland. - Even though some members of this community still
reject modern phenomena such as electricity and
automobiles, many have chosen to cater to
increasing leisure demands of the larger society.
22Cultural IntegrationLane County, Pennsylvania
- Motels, restaurants, shops, and activities such
as buggy rides playing on the local heritage are
increasingly common and are evidence of
assimilation. - The signs folk hex symbols are countered by the
popular AAA (American Automobile Association).
23Cultural IntegrationLane County, Pennsylvania
- The AAA is an instrument of landscape change as
it provides information, recommends destinations
and routeways, and puts its seal of approval on
accommodations for thousands of travelers
nation-wide.
24Mapping personal preference
- Working against the convergence hypothesis is
greater personal individualism - Gone is the conformity of folk cultures
- Individualism, coupled with other factors, has
the ability to create new regionalism - Gives us the will and means to diverge rather
than converge - Free exercise of individual preferences each
person doing his/her own thing - Could create a new spatial order
25Mapping personal preference
- How new spatial restructuring can occur
- If people who pursue similar life-styles gather
in close geographical proximity to each other - We already have Sun City, Arizona, where only the
elderly live - There are residential concentrations of gay
people in certain districts within cities such as
San Francisco - The media cater to and help promote restructuring
- The increasing desire of people for individual
freedom may have begun to alter the spatial
attributes of society and culture
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27Place images
- The media often produces place images
- Place, portrayer, and medium interact to produce
the image that colors our perception and
cognition of places and regions we have never
visited - The images created may be inaccurate or
misleading, but create a world in our minds
28Place images
- Example of Hawaii
- In the American mind a sort of earthly paradise
- Peopled by scantily clad, eternally happy,
invariably good-looking swarthy natives - A physical setting of unparalleled natural beauty
and idyllic climate - The interworkings of popular culture cause these
images to proliferate and become more vivid, if
not more accurate
29Social spatialization
- Geographer Rob Shields views
- Sees popular cultural integration from the
core/periphery perspective - Agrees we need to begin remapping the
universalized and homogeneous spatialization of
popular culture - We need to reveal heterogeneous places
- Agrees place images are very powerful
30Social spatialization
- Geographer Rob Shields views
- Devotes attention to peripheral areas and locales
left behind in the modern race for progress - Because of remoteness
- Because they are sites of illicit or disdained
activities - Margins become signifiers of everything centers
deny or repress - Legalized prostitution in Nevada
- Legalized gambling casinos in Atlantic City, New
Jersey - English resort town of Brighton, where proper
Londoners can spend a dirty weekend
31Social spatialization
- Geographer Rob Shields views
- Canadian North
- Arctic and Subarctic regions
- Native folk cultures survive at least in vestige
- Popular culture intrudes more weakly
- Southern Canadians mythologized the North as seat
of the real Canada a counter-balance to the
civilized world of the urbanized South - Planetary culture is almost certainly illusory in
the age of popular culture - Popular culture and its integration work as much
against homogenization as for it
32Popular culture
- Popular Culture Regions
- Diffusion in Popular Culture
- The Ecology of Popular Culture
- Cultural Integration in Popular Culture
- Landscapes of Popular Culture
33Elitist landscapes
- Development of social classes is a distinctive
aspect of popular culture - The top social class consists of persons of
wealth, education, and tastethe elitist class - Because of their wealth, desire to be together,
distinctive tastes, and hedonistic lifestyles,
they create distinctive cultural landscapes
34Elitist landscapes
- Example of the French Riviera
- A district of stunning natural beauty and idyllic
climate - French elite created an aesthetically pleasing
cultural landscape - Characterized by preservation of old buildings
and town cores - Building codes and height restrictions are
rigorously enforced - Land values have risen making the Riviera ever
more elitist - It is now far removed from the folk culture and
poverty that prevailed there before 1850 - Farmers and fishermen have almost disappeared
from the region
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36Leisure LandscapeSouthern France
- This is an artificial beach, made by dumping sand
on a rocky shore of the Mediterranean Sea near
Spain. - Increases in leisure time and disposable income
create demand for recreational
37Leisure LandscapeSouthern France
- opportunities and many Northern Europeans
head southward in - Here, a natural environment has been
constructed for leisure, and with an array of new
hotels and services, evolves as a leisure
landscape.
38Elitist landscapes
- America also has its elitist landscapes
- Exclusive suburbs with rigidly-enforced
architectural themes are common - In Santa Fe the favored architectural style is
pseudo-Pueblo Indian
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40Elitist landscapes
- The gentleman farm agricultural unit operated
for pleasure rather than profit - Owned by affluent city people as an avocation
- Help to create or maintain high social standing
- Most notable found
- In the inner Bluegrass Basin of north Kentucky
- The Virginia Piedmont west of Washington, D.C.
- Eastern Long Island in New York
- Parts of southeastern Pennsylvania
- Engage in such activities as breeding fine
cattle, racing horses, or fox hunting
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42Elitist landscapes
- Gentleman farms in the Kentucky Bluegrass Basin
- Concentrations so great they constitute a
dominant feature on the landscape - Have black or white wooden fences
- A rural landscape created more for appearance
than function - Elaborate entrance gates with hand-painted sign
giving name of farm and owner - Network of surfaced, well-maintained driveways
and pasture roads - Elegant houses visible through a lawnlike
parkland dotted with clumps of trees and maybe a
pond or two - Tourists think they are seeing the real rural
America
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44Landscapes of consumption
- Eye catching commercial strips along urban
arterial streets - Study of the evolution of such a strip in an
Illinois college town - Covered the period 1919 to 1979
- Street changed from single-family residential to
a commercial focus
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47Landscapes of consumption
- Researchers suggested a five-stage model of strip
evolution - Single-family residential period
- Introduction of gasoline stations
- Other businesses join growing number of filling
stations, - Multi-unit housing becomes common
- Absentee ownership increases
- Commercial function dominates
- Businesses catering to drive-in trade proliferate
- Residential use sharply declines
- Income levels of remaining inhabitants is low
- Residential function of the street disappears
- Totally commercial landscape prevails
- Business properties expand to provide off-street
parking - Often public outcry against the ugliness of the
strip is raised
48Landscapes of consumption
- Represent popular aesthetic values, and may
reveal social and cultural problems that need
redress - May be needed antidote to plastic artificiality
of elitist landscapes - Perception of strip creators
- See it differently than do visitors
- Owners or operators of businesses are proud of
them and their role in the community - Hard work and hope colors their perceptions
49Landscapes of consumption
- The grandest of the indoor shopping malls West
Edmonton Mall - Located in the Canadian province of Alberta
- Encloses 5.2 million square feet and completed in
1986 - Employs 18,000 people in over 600 stores and
services - Earned 42 percent of dollars spent in local
shopping centers in its first nine months of
operation
50Landscapes of consumption
- The grandest of the indoor shopping malls West
Edmonton Mall - Boasts a water park, sea aquarium, and ice
skating rink - Also has mini-golf course, roller coaster, and 19
movie theaters - Has a 360 room motel
- Its streets feature motifs from exotic places
- Hopkins says this simulated landscape reveals
growing intrusion of spectacle, fantasy, and
escapism into the urban landscape
51Leisure landscapes
- West Edmonton Mall is more than a landscape of
consumption being clearly designed as much for
leisure as for shopping - Leisure landscapes take many forms
- RV resort landscape of greater Phoenix where
recreational nomads spend winter months - In the United States alone golf courses occupy an
area twice the size of the state of Delaware
52Leisure landscapes
- Leisure landscapes take many forms
- Kindred amenity landscapes Minnesota North Lake
country - In one area 40 percent of dwellings are weekend
cottages or vacation homes - Often rustic or humble in appearance
53Leisure landscapes
- Historylands
- Collections of old structures relocated to fenced
areas open only during certain seasons or hours - If desired bit of visual history has perished,
Americans and Canadians do not hesitate to
rebuild it from scratch - ExamplesJamestown, Virginia, or Louisbourg on
Cape Breton Island - People do not live in these parks
- Role-playing actors sometimes pretend to live in
some past era
54The American scene
- Article written by David Lowenthal an overall
evaluation of the visible impact of popular
culture in the American countryside - Some of the main characteristics of popular
landscape as seen by Lowenthal - Cult of bigness
- Tolerance of present ugliness to achieve a
supposedly glorious future - Emphasis on individual features at expense of
aggregates, which produced a casual chaos - Preeminence of function over form
55The American scene
- Fondness for massive structures is reflected in
edifices such as - The Empire State Building
- The Pentagon
- The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge
- Salt Lake Citys Mormon Temple
- This fondness for largeness may reflect an effort
to match the largeness of the physical
environment -- Grand Canyon, redwoods,
Yellowstone geysers
56The American scene
- Lowenthal says Americans tend to regard their
cultural landscape as unfinished - Tend to accept structures that are makeshift,
flimsy, and transient - Hardships of pioneer life may have preconditioned
them toward valuing function over beauty - State capitol grounds in Oklahoma City are
adorned with working oil wells and their derricks
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58The American scene
- Lowenthal says individual landscape features take
precedence over groupings - Five buildings or houses in a row may display
five architectural styles - Rarely is an attempt made to erect assemblages
that belong together - Each structure must be unique and eye-catching
- Architects vie with one another to produce
attention-grabbing edifices - Each fast-food chain requires it own outlandish
style to gain instant visual recognition - Australians share this fondness for unique
designsSydneys opera house
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60The American scene
- The traditional American front yard
- Since the early 1800s, the expanse of grassy lawn
has prevailed - Manicured lawns now occupy an area equal to the
size of Pennsylvania! - Neglect of front lawns or using the space for
something functional can invite animosity and
contempt of neighbors - Lawn neglect can also lower property values or be
in violation of building codes - Most Americans accept the grass-covered front
yard as a natural order of things in suburbia
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62The American scene
- The traditional American front yard
- Migrating Anglos in the nineteenth century
brought the front lawn into desert areas - Irrigation was necessary to maintain the grass
- Anglo dwellings with their lawns stood in marked
contrast to older Hispanic houses that either
lacked yards or had bare-earth areas
63The American scene
- The traditional American front yard
- Decline of the grass front yard in favor of
desert front yards - Began to rise in the 1950s
- Gravel, crushed rock, desert plants, paving, or
undisturbed desert - Spurred by new urban immigrants who found the
desert beautiful - Acceptance occurred earliest in higher-priced
subdivisions - Spread gradually to middle-class districts
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65The American scene
- The traditional American front yard
- Decline of the grass front yard in favor of
desert front yards - One half of all houses built in Tucson between
1965 and 1975 had desert front yards - Some yards covered with gravel dyed
greensimulation of lawns and a classic example
of a permeable barrier in cultural diffusion - Decline of lawn tradition heralds emergence of a
new distinct popular culture region - Reflects an appreciation of Arizonas natural
setting and Hispanic heritage - Desert fronts have since diffused to neighboring
states and beyond, such as Florida where plastic
sheets are installed under gravel to prevent
grass and weeds
66Landscapes of tragedy
- Geographer Kenneth Foote terms these landscapes
shadowed ground - Stigmatized sites where horrible events
transpired - Site of Martin Luther Kings assassination
- Schoolbook Depository from which President
Kennedy was assassinated - Gettysburg Battlefield from the Civil War
- Some sites are obliterated from the landscape
67Landscapes of tragedy
- Some sites are rectified, after repairs, and a
plaque is placed as a reminder of the tragedy
that occurred there - Level of shame often helps determine the fate of
shadowed ground - Geographer Phil Hubbard speaks of immoral
landscapesthose associated with prostitution - Others have written about the landscape of the
agedproduced when popular culture began to
separate disabled older people residentially
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