Culture is passed on from one generation to the next through the process of socialisation
It is through this process of socialisation that individuals are fitted into the society in which they live
Culture therefore acts as a link between the individual and society
Dominant culture
The main culture in a society
Shared or accepted without opposition
Britain’s dominant culture is white patriarchal and uneven
Views of what is valuable and worthwhile of people with these traits in culture are regarded and more important and given higher status
Subculture
A subculture is a group of people within a culture that distinguish themselves from the primary culture to which they belong
Subcultures of resistance are in active opposition to the dominant culture
Willis and anti-school subcultures
Willis (1997) found an anti-school subculture in his study of a group of working-class lads, in which resistance to schooling and the culture of the school was highly valued
Hall & Jefferson and anti-school subcultures
Hall and Jefferson (1976) saw particular youth subcultural styles such as Skinheads and Punks as forms of resistance to dominant culture
Folk culture
The culture created by local communities
Rooted in the experiences, customs, and beliefs of the everyday life of ordinary people
It is ‘authentic’ rather than ‘manufactured’ as it is created by ordinary people themselves
Active participation and involvement of people
Passed on through socialisation
High culture
Seen as being superior to other forms of culture
Lasting artistic or literary value
Aimed at small, intellectual, upper-class and middle-class groups
Seen as something set apart from everyday life
Seen as special and to be treated with respect
Mass culture
Sometimes referred to as popular or low culture
It is a product of industrial societies
Aimed at mass of ordinary people, but lacks roots in their experiences
Commercially produced by businesses for profit
Often produced for passive consumption rather than active involvement
Processed, trivial, mindless escapist fantasy which ruins language
Exploits people’s emotional needs
Bourdieu - Marxist on mass culture
High culture is allegedly superior because dominant class has the power to impose its own cultural ideas on what is good or bad taste on the rest of society
Marcuse - Marxist on mass culture
Profit-driven, manipulated into wanting it by advertising
Undermines people’s ability to think critically about the world
Form of social repression and social control
Given illusion of choice between dumbed-down products
Lulls consumers into mindless conformity
Prevents revolution
Strinati - Postmodernist on mass culture
Mass culture has value and is worthy of study
Diversity and choice within popular culture which people select from and critically respond to
There isn’t one mass culture which people respond uncritically to
Livingstone on mass culture
Soap Operas educate and inform the public about important social issues
This sparks critical debate
Critics of mass culture are seen as elitist snobs who rank on a ‘slob-to-snob’ scale
Strinati - Postmodernist on the distinction between high and popular culture
The distinction is weakening
Mass-communication technology make a huge range of cultural products available
High culture is no longer the preserve of cultural elites as people can now pick n mix due to wider range of cultural products
No longer any agreement on what distinguishes high culture from popular culture
More difficult for one set of cultural ideas on what is good taste
Marxists on the distinction between high and popular culture
High culture has become popularised and commercialised as it is forced to earn its keep by mass consumption and attracting tourists
Forced into becoming fun and inclusive for everyone, not just upper and middle
High culture is now also a commodity and is for sale like popular culture
Expansion of media-based cultural industries like magazines and books made the distinction meaningless
Elements of high and popular culture have become part of each other
Storey on the distinction between high and popular culture
Members of the dominant class are beginning to consume what was dismissed as mass culture and vice versa
Giddings - Postmodernist on distinction between high and popular culture
High culture art forms are now for sale in the mass popular culture market
Incorporated into daily life, e.g., art and music in video games
Technology means anyone can experience high culture products
Lines between high culture and mass culture are like borders between countries in that they are only there because we are told they are there and people will always disagree on where those borders lie’
Becomes harder to draw distinctions as mass culture becomes more globalised and cultures intertwine
Consequences of globalisation
Undermines national and local cultures
Emergence of a global culture where cultural products, norms, values etc. have become more alike
International tourism, internet and international division of labour has interconnected the world further, socially and economically
Flew – Media and digitalisation
Developed a global popular culture
Cultural industries must now operate globally
Breaks down cultural distance
Popular culture is spread between countries
Advertising and promotion of lifestyles has become global, becoming part of different cultures
The same cultural and consumer products have become way of life of many societies
People now have access to many different cultural products from different cultures
Ritzer – Global Brands
Companies and brands now operate on a global scale
Promotes a global standardised culture and consumer lifestyle
Weakens local cultures
McDonalds spans over 119 countries, local food places must close
Companies use transnational media to promote on a global stage
TV companies sell programmes globally, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire was distributed to 120 countries in 2012
Global media
Contributed to English becoming internationally dominant
Movie stars are known across the world
Cultures are becoming more similar with same shows, clothes, food etc.
The process of cultures becoming more uniform and merging into one is called cultural homogenisation
Homogenised global culture may be more accurate than local or national cultures
Identity
How individuals or groups see and define themselves and how others see them
Personality is psychological and fixed
Identity is more fluid
Helps us identify and form social connections and establish solidarity
Lawler – Similarities and differences
Identity involves marking out similarities and differences with others
We have identities which make us similar
There are personal aspects to identity
None of us are identical
Identity helps us recognise and identify with each other
Identity fits us into society
Mead – I and Self
The ‘I’ is the personal bit of identity that sets us apart from others, or the ‘inner core’
This is said to exist beyond social influences
The ‘self’ arises in the process of social experience – not present at birth
No-one has the same experiences in life
Identity choice
We are limited to what we can adopt by factors such as social class
These factors influence how others see us
The identity someone wants to assert may not match what others recognise
Becker- master status
A master status is a dominant identity that overrides all other aspects of that person’s identity
Giddens and Sutton
Identities are a combination of individual, personal and social factors
Primary Identities are formed in primary socialisation and include factors such as gender and ethnicity
Secondary Identities build on primary identities but establish new roles depending on roles people achieve and adopt
Secondary Identities are more fluid and people often alter them
Lawler - social stories
Formation of identity is a social and collective process
Identities are rooted in society and are formed as we interact with others in our daily lives
Formation of identities is like storytelling
People tell themselves stories to interpret what happens to them in social lives
This forms a ‘plot’ we call identity
Bauman - postmodernist
Growing insecurity around identities
Formerly stable identities forming from social class, gender, ethnicity etc. have become more fluid, fragmented and changeable
Personal identity
Mead called it the ‘inner me’/’I’
Woodward said its concerned with ‘Who am I?’
How people are different from others
Social identity
Little choice
Defines individuals with their social groups
Formation may come from behaviours exhibited in social roles
Collective identity
An identity shared by a social group
Incorporates choice in that we can choose to identify with these groups
E.g., feminist, Goth, gang member
Multiple identities
People may have several identities
Drawing on more than one sense of identity
Asserting different identities in different social scenarios
Goffman - stigmatised identities
A stigmatised identity is in some way undesirable or demeaning, excluding people from full acceptance in society
Social consequences for stigmatised identity such as ridicule or refusing employment
Attempts to present a normal identity will fail, leading to a ‘failed’/’Spoiled’ identity
Socialisation
The process by which we learn culture
Enables us to operate in society
Life-long process
Helps us communicate and understand meaning
Teaches us how to behave and what to expect in social scenarios
Builds predictability in social life
Avoids chaos and confusion from if we had to guess social rules and norms
Resocialisation
When people are removed from everyday situations and encounter new social environments
Learning of new norms and values
E.g., In prison, those who don’t learn the norms and values get punished
Goffman on resocialisation
Found resocialisation in psychiatric hospitals with the hospital seeking to impose new values and norms that met the needs of the hospital rather than patient
Jenkins on identity
Identities are formed in the socialisation process
Through learning culture and through interactions people understand what makes them similar and different to others
Learning a culture of a society involved learning what is expected of people in different positions
These roles include social identities such as mother or employee
Through meeting other people individuals come to learn what is expected of them
Primary socialisation
Early years of childhood
Socialised by the family
Children begin to acquire a sense of who they are as individuals and who they are in a society
These identities formed in childhood will often remain throughout people’s lives and are much more difficult to change in adulthood
Parsons- functionalist on primary socialisation
Crucial for turning children into social beings
Learning culture to adapt to live in society
Done through imitating behavior, learning language, learning rules etc.
Feral children show where primary socialisation has failed