CS401A's Prelims: Phil. Pop Culture Module 01 Flashcards
For preliminary exams.
Is a way of living, covering a broad range of aspects from traditions, values, and beliefs, to behaviors, daily tasks, rituals, social norms, and rules to name a few.
culture
Is what we usually associate with intellectual discourse, high-brow comedy, and elaborate literature, to name a few.
high culture
It reflects the best aesthetics of a particular society.
high culture
It means traditions, music, and anything else practiced by a certain group is exclusively theirs until they share it with the rest.
folk culture
Is anything that the general population can access easily.
popular culture
It includes music, art, literature, fashion, dance, film, television, radio, and recently, the Internet.
popular culture
The category encompasses varied forms of media, but it usually includes television, film, music, and literature.
entertainment
The category covers any new trend that people perform and/or consume, including fashion, art, dance, language, and food trends.
lifestyle
The category covers anything related to traditional sports, including printed merchandise and icons and electronic sports (or eSports).
sports
The category covers any news event that has gained significant attention – intentional or otherwise, positive or negative, which has shaped public opinion about it.
news
The category encompasses anything and everything politics-related, which includes politicians and political events.
politics
The category encompasses new media forms, including social media, gadgets, video games, and general Internet culture.
technology
This group supports the notion of exclusivity in culture because only the people with knowledge and access to these cultures can appreciate them.
subculture
Is formed when a certain group begins to oppose the established norms of pop and breaks off from another group that they came from.
counterculture
In the American 1960s, a large group began to spring forth from its established social norms.
hippie culture
Began to advocate for peace, sexual exploration and liberation, as well as the legalization of recreational drugs.
hippie culture
It goes so far as to define itself differently – from wild hairstyles to the “in-you-face” attitudes of the people who share the same idea: to stand up against authority and live life as you see fit.
punk culture
Defined as a group with which a person can affiliate themselves while existing, interacting, and negotiating within another group.
co-culture
This process of soul-searching, which also affects the dynamics and structure of a group.
youth culture
They appear most frequently when young people experience social autonomy.
youth culture