1 / 59

The Human Mosaic CHAPTER TWO

The Human Mosaic CHAPTER TWO. Many Worlds: Geographies of Cultural Difference. I. Introduction :. Many Cultures folk culture vs. popular culture material vs. non-material culture dominant cultures vs. subcultures 1) Regions of Difference A) Material Folk Culture Regions

daxia
Télécharger la présentation

The Human Mosaic CHAPTER TWO

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. The Human MosaicCHAPTER TWO Many Worlds: Geographies of Cultural Difference

  2. I. Introduction: Many Cultures folk culture vs. popular culture material vs. non-material culture dominant cultures vs. subcultures 1) Regions of Difference A) Material Folk Culture Regions Plains Ranch (“beef wheel”) African-American (“scraped earth”) Yankee (“winged death heads”) Pennsylvanian (“forebay barn”) Quebec French (“petanque”)

  3. Taking a look at roadside cemeteries

  4. Shotgun Houses in Valdosta, Georgia

  5. B) Is Popular Culture Placeless? reasons for placelessness? popular subcultures and “The Clustering of America” (Michael Weiss)

  6. Where are You? Tokyo, Japan

  7. Where are You? Idaho

  8. Where are You? Finland

  9. C) Indigenous Culture Regions a clear sense of place how is their survival possible? swidden agriculture and animism in South Asia Mayan culture region of Central America D) Folklore Regions Swiss Folklore regions: where do babies come from?

  10. Folk Culture: Sense of Place in Cappadocia

  11. Murong tribesman with his children in indigenous culture region in Bangladesh

  12. Mayan culture region in Middle America

  13. Indigenous culture region of the Andes (Quechua & Aymara)

  14. Where do babies come from?

  15. E) Food and Drink from beer consumption to fast-food sales F) Popular Music Elvis Who? G) Sports in North America ice hockey, lacrosse, football, soccer, etc. H) Vernacular Culture Regions Where do you live? Midwest? South or Dixieland?

  16. Vernacular regions in North America (after Wilbur Zelinsky)

  17. Defining the Midwest

  18. 2) Folk and Popular Culture Diffusion: A) Agricultural Fairs B) Blowguns: diffusion or independent innovation? C) Diffusion in Popular Culture hierarchical or contagious? time-distance decay? Wal-Mart: reverse hierarchical

  19. D) Advertising most effective device in diffusion in popular culture neighborhood effect importance of visual messages(“Marlboro Man”) E) Communication Barriers of Punk Rock and Gangsta Rap from the U.S. Congress to the Taliban F) Diffusion of the Rodeo from cowboy contests to commercial rodeo absorbing and permeable barriers

  20. Another Mc Donald’s opening in Moscow …

  21. 3) Ecology of Folk and Popular Cultures A) Indigenous Ecology sustainability and subsistence farming conservation of global biodiversity colonialism and neo-colonialism and its consequences B) Local Knowledge indigenous technical knowledge subsistence economies indigenous folk medicine and modern pharmaceutical products

  22. C) Global Economy is “globalization” good for us? turtles and the Miskito population resiliency of indigenous cultures and their fight for survival D) Folk Ecology environmental perception in migration use of different building materials

  23. F) Ecology of Popular Culture product of industrialization heavy demands on natural resources and ecosystems recreational activities litter culture mechanistic view of nature? (vs. organic view of nature)

  24. 4) Interaction in Folk and Popular Cultures A) Convergence Hypothesis Wilbur Zelinsky’s study of given names (1790/1968) B) Difference Revitalized? greater individualism and resistance to conformity (“segregated” communities within popular culture) Sun City, Arizona San Francisco, California “narrowcasting” of and for special interest groups local consumption cultures / consumer nationalism C) Place Images accurate or misleading? Hawaii? Bali? Others?

  25. Sun City, Arizona

  26. 5) Folk and Popular Cultural Landscapes A) Folk Architecture based on collective memory of traditional people barns, churches, mills, fences, dwellings, roofs B) Folk Housing throughout the World Mongol Yurt Navajo hogan

  27. C) Folk Housing in North America Yankee “upright and wing” African-American “shotgun” Upland Southern “saddlebag” & “dogtrot” Quebec French Acadian “Creole” … etc. D) Landscapes of Popular Culture landscapes of consumption five-stage model of strip evolution single-family residential landscape → over time increasing commercial functions → creation of a commercial landscape

More Related