1 / 11

Popular Culture and Identity

Popular Culture and Identity . “Shiloh”. Outline. Starting Questions re. popular cultures re. “ Shiloh ” General Introd . Leroy vs. Norma Jean, their marriage Mabel ’s maternal guidance The turning points The visit to Shiloh . Themes and Issues related to Popular Culture .

Patman
Télécharger la présentation

Popular Culture and Identity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Popular Culture and Identity “Shiloh”

  2. Outline • Starting Questions • re. popular cultures • re. “Shiloh” • General Introd. • Leroy vs. Norma Jean, their marriage • Mabel’s maternal guidance • The turning points • The visit to Shiloh.

  3. Themes and Issues related to Popular Culture • Fictions • Overall Commodification: pervading everyday life • Massification & conformity of consumers  personal appropriations (Leroy and Jean) • Blurring the boundaries between high art and popular culture (Laurie Anderson)

  4. Bobbie Ann Mason—New South Writer • Setting: Western Kentucky • her characters– • grappling in some way with the shift from rural traditions to a culture centered on television, junk food, and popular music. • unremarkable, working-class people who usually lack money and education but who are sensitive enough to realize that something is missing in their lives. • Minimalist style – flat and matter-of-fact tone, not much description • E.g. In Country

  5. Questions • How do they each define their identities? • What’s the problem in Norma and Leroy’s marriage? How is it related to popular culture? • What does Shiloh represent for them?

  6. Leroy after car injury pp. 271-272; feminized, losing memory • Not driving his rig anymore (271) ; collecting disability pension, • feminized or domesticated? • working on craft kits (e.g. a log cabin and B-17 Flying Fortress; a needlepointed Star Trek pillow)  wanting to build a log cabin • Observing Norma closely p. 275 The rig as a big bird  bird feeding • Knows the potential problems of his marriage through Donahue; • His memory fading all the time: not remember where he learns things. P. 272, 274 (remembers pop culture better) • Views of his ‘return’: 273 finally settled down (after 17 years) • get marijuana at a shopping center 273

  7. Norma Jean –masculine role; missing something • Works on her muscle, like a “Wonder Woman” • Works in drugstore, knows cosmetics well  L: petroleum products • Re. his returning home, not happy • "Sixties Songbook" p. 273 “missed something. • The baby – died of sudden infant death 273 •  Norma’s suggestion: stand up all day behind a cosmetic counter (to get strong feet) 275 • Norma herself –doing goose steps Note: Goose step – A straight-legged style of military marching used by the armies of several nations

  8. Their Marriage before/after the accident • P. 275 – Before: TV cards, cereal called Body Buddies • Now: observing details about Norma • Before: Leroy – tell stories to hitchhikers p. 276-77 • Now: wants to tell Norma his story before ‘they’ve forgotten a lot about each other.’ Then he forgets why he wants to do it.

  9. Mabel and her Motherly Advice • Looks after Jean’s daily details (274 plants, laundry) • Buys Jean a dust ruffle;  Leroy to hide things under • Asks Leroy to get a job; • Suggests that they go to Shiloh, the Civil War battleground. • Talks about the dachshund dog accident p. 277  baby dies out of neglect. •  Can Mabel be of help?

  10. Turning Point (1) • Norma’s going to school 277; aware of names and their differences 279 • cooking “unusual” foods 278 • No longer “goes to bed with the chickens” (= go to bed early at night) • Mabel’s suggestion to go to Shiloh, which means A. “history” • of the nation • Of Mabel’s only time away from home. --”prettiest place, so full of history.” B. “A little change” for Norma p. 279

  11. The Visit to Shiloh • Like a golf course 279 • Tourists and campers mixed with historical sites • Leroy: • not knowing history, feeling awkward, like a boy with an older woman; • still drinking coke, get distracted by the views of the cemetery. • Leroy’s view of history pp. 280-81– empty; • the inner workings of marriage, like most of history, have escaped him.

More Related