Title: Sociology 152a
1Sociology 152a
- Class 2September 19, 2005.
2Put your love of arts, museums to good use The
Londoner. Aug. 24/05. P. B5
- One of the permanent collections of Museum
London defines London before city incorporation
in 1855 with traditional objects juxtaposed
against features obvious to London in present
day. - Currently seeking volunteers for tour guides,
under the guidance of the curator of education. - Contact Bev Bourque, visitor services
coordinator, phone 519-661-0333 or
bborque_at_museumlondon.ca - Tours for the general public available throughout
the year.
3Tomlinson Globalised Culture The Triumph of
the West? (1999)
- Two stages of globalized culture (p. 89)
- Early globalisation beginning in the 17th c.,
with exploration and colonization of the world by
European powers - Characterized by visions of greatness, of
civilizing the world, and winning more souls for
Christianity - E.g. Song Rule Britannia
- Late globalisation free trade multinationals
spreading/ relocating around the world - Focus on dystopian aspect, seen as a threat
rather than a promise - E.g. loss of distinctiveness of different
cultures, homogenization, Disnification
4Global Culture not really global
- Although it has reached almost all areas of the
globe, it is the global extension of Western
(Eur. NA) culture (p. 89). - What is Westernisation?
- Spread of the consumer culture of Western
capitalism - e.g McDonalds, Coca Cola, Levi Jeans
- styles of dress
- What designers fashions are adopted globally?
- Pattern of cultural experience dominated by the
mass media - e.g. CNN, Fox
- Acceptance of technological culture of the west
5Not all aspects of the West can be found
throughout the world today
- Why? Cultural protectionist legislation (p. 90)
- e.g. in Islamic societies, an acceptance of the
technological culture of the West and aspects of
its consumerism may coexist with a rejection of
its sexual permissiveness and secular outlook - e.g. Canadian legislation which requires a
certain amount of Canadian content in the mass
media of communication - Regulated by the government appointed Canadian
Radio and Television Commission
6Dialectic conception of cultureflow and counter
flow (p. 91)
- Non-western cultures can dynamically resist
globalised culture - e.g. world music originates in the periphery of
the world and becomes popular in the centre - Canadians prefer Tim Hortons to Krispy Kreme,
although Starbucks is bigger than both of them - gives rise to a hybrid, mestizaje, cut-and-mix
culture
72nd stage of globalization may bring decline, and
not triumph of the West
- The Wests success in spreading its culture
around the world means that it is no longer
unique - Everyone can own Western culture and can
reinterpret and recreate it - E.g. Kwakiutl in B.C. are reconstructing their
traditional culture using classical
anthropological studies of their ancestors (p.
94) - Other aboriginal people are making land claims
based on anthropological literature - Western culture has lost some of its power over
other cultures, and is actively opposed by people
called terrorists by the current US
administration (p. 93)
8Parts of what used to be called the Third World
more advanced than the West
- May be a complex causal relationship between the
rise and decline of such regions connected by a
globalised capitalist market - E.g. so called Asian Tigers
- Japan, S. Korea, Taiwan, Singapore
- With high gas prices, the Big 3 US car companies
have announced that they will put more R D into
hybrid cars using alternative fuel - Toyota is already way ahead of them
9Capitalism has no loyalty to its birthplace (p.
93)
- Outsourcing
- the transfer of production out of the West to
places where cost are lower - E.g. Information Technology production and call
centers have moved to India - Western capital has been moving very quickly into
China - Kings joint program with a Chinese university in
economics is a local manifestation
10Capitalism may also fail Westerners
- "How the Free Market Killed New Orleans" by M.
Parenti - The free market played a crucial role in the
destruction of New Orleans and the death of
thousands of its residents. Armed with advanced
warning that a momentous (force 5) hurricane was
going to hit that city and surrounding areas,
what did officials do? They played the free
market.They announced that everyone should
evacuate. Everyone was expected to devise their
own way out of the disaster area by private
means, just as the free market dictates, just
like people do when disaster hits free-market
Third World countries. - When an especially powerful hurricane hit Cuba
last year, the Castro government, abetted by
neighborhood citizen committees and local
Communist party cadres, evacuated 1.3 million
people, more than 10 of the country's
population, with not a single life lost, a
heartening feat that went largely unmentioned in
the U.S. press.
11Global culture is ubiquitous
- But do we feel we own it?
- How many people have a Western cultural identity?
- How many people are proud of Western culture?
12Part 3 Symbolic Economies
- The symbolic economy approach is concerned with
the relationship between culture and power. - The two have been strongly interconnected in the
reshaping of cities through urban development. - Only papers by Crawford and Fainstein are
required reading
13Crawford The World in a Shopping Mall
- Malls are a new and very common architectural
form - West Edmonton Mall (WEM) is the largest in world
- in 1992 when article was published
- Claims to contain entire world
- But, the malls mixture of stores make it like
every other shopping mall - But shoppers come from all over the world
- 70 of malls visitors are from outside of
Alberta - They spend enough to generate profits of 300 per
sq. ft., more than twice the return of most
malls. - More than 15,000 people employed at the WEM and
they also spend free time there
14Where are shopping malls?
- North America has 28,500 shopping malls,
originating in the 1950s - Malls dominate retail sales, accounting for more
than 53 of all purchases in Canada and the US.
(p. 127) - Real estate developers do demographic surveys to
figure out the catchment area of each mall - i.e. those who are likely to shop there
- As a result, malls are most densely located in
the richest markets which are in cities and their
suburbs - The poorest areas have the least shopping malls
- In the US, West Virginia
15Mall form exported to rest of world
- By 1980, the US landscape crowded with malls
- Later, exported to third world countries
- Local developers provide enclosed shopping malls
(p. 129) - My Mexican research shows that developers are
based in capital cities and have corporate ties
with US mall developers - For whom? Upper and middle class consumers
16People now spend enormous amounts of time in malls
- Typical mall visit in 1960 took 20 min. and now
it is nearly 3 hrs. (p. 130) - Social analysis of what is happening in this time
- The Gruen transfer
- The moment when a destination buyer, with a
specific purchase in mind, is transformed into an
impulse shopper - People seem to enjoy mall shopping
- The best measure of social consciousness is now
the Index of Consumer Sentiment, which charts
optimism about the state of the world in terms of
willingness to spend. (p. 129)
17Retail magic (p. 131)
- Unlike earlier shopping experiences where
haggling was common, and buyer socially engaged
with seller, shoppers now mainly look - Enclosed shopping malls suspend space, time
weather\ - Indirect commodification
- Process by which nonsalable objects, activities
and images are purposely placed in the
commodified world of the mall - Adjacent attraction
- the most dissimilar objects lend each other
mutual support when placed next to each other - E.g. placing an ordinary pot in a window display
of a Moroccan harem transforms the pot into
something exotic, mysterious, and desirable
18What is the key to shopping center success?
- J. C. Nichols, generally regarded as the father
of the shopping center for his role in developing
Country Club Plaza in Kansas City, regarded which
of the following as a key to success (p. 133) - A. excellent architecture
- B. strategies to ensure local political support
- C. adequate ceiling heights
- D. abundant or unlimited parking
- E. adjacent attraction
19Public life in the pleasure dome of the mall
- 1st step recreating a second nature indoors
- 2nd step recreating the city
- To create essentially a fantasy urbanism devoid
of citys negative aspects weather, traffic, and
poor people - Conflict between public and private space
Supreme Court in US decided malls had a legal
right to be defined as a private space, allowing
bans on any activity the owners deemed
detrimental to consumption - Justice Thurgood Marshalls dissenting opinion
- Since the mall had assumed the role of a
traditional town square, as its sponsors
continually boasted, it must also assume its
public responsibilities (p. 134)
20Malls resegregate urban shopping areas (p. 135)
- Repackaging the city in a safe, clean, and
controlled form gave the mall greater importance
as a community center. - Malls reproduced a central business district in
the suburbs - Heavily patrolled malls now provide a safe urban
space with a clientele as homogeneous as that of
their suburban counterparts. In many cities, the
construction of urban malls served to resegregate
urban shopping areas.
21What is wrong with this passage on p. 137?
- But if mall décor and design are not specific
enough to tell young blacks or the homeless that
they are not welcome, more literal warnings can
be issued. Since statistics show that
shopping-mall crimes, from shoplifting to
purse-snatching to car theft increased, the
assurance of the malls sealed space is no longer
adequate.
22The WEM portrays illegal aspects of street life
as an attraction (p. 137)
- the ambiguous aspects of a lively street life
are vicariously acknowledged, at a nostalgic
distance to be sure, by Bourbon Streets
collection of mannequins, depicting the street
people of New Orleans. Frozen in permanent poses
of abandon, drunks, prostitutes, and panhandlers
act out transgressions forbidden in the malls
simulated city. - For many suburbanites, malls are a desirable
alternative to the socially and economically
troubled urban downtowns they fled.
23Different malls for different classes (p. 136)
- In the richest markets, luxury malls like the
Rodeo Collection of Beverly Hills, offer
expensive specialty goods - in sumptuous settings, more like luxurious hotels
than shopping malls. - At the other end of the market, outlet malls sell
slightly damaged or out-of-date goods at discount
prices - Since low cost is the major attraction,
undecorated, low-rent buildings only enhance
their utilitarian atmosphere
24The world as a shopping mall.
- Ending the article, the author gives many
examples of how new museums have adopted the form
of the shopping mall - Recall this for your written assignment and test
it in your museum visit(s). - The world of the shopping mallrespecting no
boundaries, no longer limited even by the
imperative of consumption, has become the world
(p. 138)
25Dual view of todays shanty towns (from Wilsons
article)
- Local governments
- Recognize the power of self organization,
diversity - Legalize invaded land
- Provide services where possible
- Build on greater fulfillment of family obligations
- Planning Literature
- Contempt for the poor
- Emphasized social problems
- Have imposed western planning with its emphasis
on zoning, segregation, the individual and
surveillance
26Video Mixed Feelings San Diego/Tijuana(Produc
ed/Directed by Phillip Rodriguez)
- What comparisons between the two cities are made?
- What is a master plan community?
- What is emergency architecture?
- What is prototype architecture?