Subcultures and conspiracy theories - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Subcultures and conspiracy theories

Description:

Subcultures and conspiracy theories Lesson 12 SOC 86 Popular Culture Robert Wonser – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:219
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: Robe6216
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Subcultures and conspiracy theories


1
Subcultures and conspiracy theories
  • Lesson 12
  • SOC 86 Popular Culture
  • Robert Wonser

2
Variations within a Culture
  • The dominant culture refers to the values, norms,
    and practices of the group within society that is
    most powerful in terms of wealth, prestige,
    status, and influence.
  • A subculture is a group within society that is
    differentiated by its distinctive values, norms,
    and lifestyle.
  • A counterculture is a group within society that
    openly rejects and/or actively opposes societys
    values and norms.

3
Subcultures Specifically
  • Prefix sub is telling implies subaltern or
    subterranean, below
  • Commonalities
  • Groups studied as subcultures are often
    positioned by themselves or others as deviant or
    debased
  • Labeled as subculture implies lower down the
    social ladder due to social differences of class,
    race, ethnicity and age.

4
Preconditions for the Emergence of Subcultures
  • Youth is a social construct, adolescence and
    teenagers are new ideas
  • Youth a stage of life defined as entailing a
    psychosocial moratorium from adult
    responsibilities and thus enables experimentation
    with identitya product of the economic
    development and affluence of Western societies in
    the twentieth century
  • Made possible because of extended higher ed,
    postponement of work, birth control ? Youth as an
    in-between phase of the life cycle free of most
    adult responsibilities and free of many (but not
    all) child restrictions

5
The Invention of Adolescence
6
Only in Context
  • Could only emerge in the specific context in
    which they did
  • First, a dominant, mass culture had to exist to
    rebel against
  • This dominant culture was a product of middle
    class post-war affluence and many subcultures are
    products of the declining middle class and the
    identity crisis that ensues afterward

7
  • Intrinsically linked with our consumerist
    society eventually it is exposed as vapid and
    unable to satiate individual desires for identity
    fulfillment ? how unique are you when you like
    what everyone else likes?
  • Where to turn? Subcultures. They offer identity
    most importantly, authentic identity partially
    defined in terms of its opposition to the
    mainstream cultures values and products.
  • In this respect identity formation is linked to
    consumption.
  • Subcultures attempt to provide an authentic
    identity for its adherents in the face of an
    increasingly vapid society

8
Punk
  • The term punk was used because it seemed to
    sum up the thread that connected everything we
    likeddrunk, obnoxious, smart but not
    pretentious, absurd, funny, ironic, and things
    that appealed to the darker side. Legs McNeil
  • Emerged during recession in NYC and after
    neoliberal (theory that champions privatization
    and condemns state intervention in the free
    market) policies decimated the city
  • Emergence of punk as a response to the demise of
    rock and the failure of sixties utopianism

9
The Irony and Resurgence of Punk
  • Punk was seen as authentic in its opposition to
    mainstream music and society ? this was precisely
    how it was later co-opted and marketed as a form
    of rebellion
  • Be different, buy
  • this!

10
Style
  • Subcultures take on a spectacular form by
    appropriating commodities and using them in
    innovative and unintended ways that assign them
    new, subversive meanings in the process of
    creating style.

11
  • Subculture participants still seek identity
    through their subcultures based on authenticity
    and difference from an imagined mainstream but
    a post-fordist view of capitalism blurs the
    boundary between subculture and popular culture
    increasingly threatening these identities.
  • How do punks manage this crisis of identity?

12
Different Punk Identities
13
Heavy Metal
  • Emerged amid deindustrialization during the 70s
    and 80s
  • Contributed to the polarization of social classes
    but also has been experienced as a crisis in
    masculinity.
  • Job losses and downward mobility caused by
    deindustrialization have emasculated
    working-class men by displacing notions of the
    breadwinner ethic that was romanticized during
    the 50s and 60s.
  • Coincided with other societal changes increased
    women in the workforce and visibility of the
    feminist movement.
  • Many men interpreted this as a threat to their
    privileged position

14
Conspiracy Theorists
Or so THEYD like you to believe
15
Defining Conspiracy
  • The essence of conspiracy belief lies in attempts
    to delineate and explain evil
  • The result is a worldview characterized by a
    sharp vision between the realms of good and evil
  • Conspiracy belief is the belief that an
    organization made up of individuals or groups was
    or is acting covertly to achieve some malevolent
    end.
  • A conspiracist worldview implies a universe
    governed by design rather than by randomness.

16
Conspiracy Theories
  • Have three principles in common
  • Nothing happens by accident
  • Nothing is as it seems
  • Everything is connected

17
  • This view is both frightening and reassuring
  • Frightening because it magnifies the power of
    evil (light and darkness struggle for cosmic
    supremacy)
  • Reassuring because it promises a world that is
    meaningful rather than arbitrary.
  • It also provides a definable enemy against which
    to struggle, endowing life with a purpose.

18
Belief in Conspiracies
  • Allows believers to make some sense of a complex
    and ever-changing world
  • The same trends that disaffected the punks, heavy
    metalers and youth in general play out in
    seemingly secretive ways.
  • It is difficult to see and understand complex
    forces political, sociological, and economic.
    An answer has to be found somewhere

19
What Unites These disparate cultures?
  • Fear and uncertainty
  • They are all reactions to the decline of the
    middle class
  • Punk sees it ostensibly as a messed up culture
    from its onset, metal and conspiracy theorists
    believes it has lost its former glory and, unable
    to understand the complex sociological factors
    that resulted in where we are to day, turn to
    what seems to make sense to explain why the world
    has changed and theyve lost their social status.

20
Or..
  • Of course, thats what they WANT you to believe.

Yep, thats the desk of Fox Mulder.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com