Japanese popular culture

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    time Pop Art was emerging in America, a war-consumed society was transitioning into a mass cultural embrace of media and art. Pop Art was the art of popular culture. It was the visual art movement that characterized a sense of optimism during the post war consumer boom of the 1960's. It coincided with the globalization of pop music and youth culture. Pop Art was young and fun and hostile to the artistic establishment.…

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    Identity Rhetoric

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    of comic book character. One thing comic book grammar that I would use to determine the significance of these characters when circulated through different mediums would be visual metaphor, which Duncan defines in Power of Comics: History, Form and Culture as, “a picture of one thing to evoke the meaning of something else.” (Duncan, 2015) My argument in this area of rhetoric would be while comics do have powerful and meaningful text often. So, can the deeper metaphors that comic book literature…

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    Beyonce’s impact on the communication of popular culture and identity. Those two perspectives that we learned in class are that popular culture is a site of hegemonic struggle and wildly favored by population. These two perspectives help to give a better understanding of how to examine both the account of Beyonce’s performance, as well as the performance itself. The first perspective, a site of hegemonic struggle, is meaning that the creator of this culture is a position of authority. While…

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    Jay Z Symbolism

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    We as rappers must decide what 's most important / And I can 't help the poor if I 'm one of them / So I got rich and gave back, to me that 's the win-win" – Jay Z (Carter, 2003) Shawn “Jay Z” Carter is among the most recognized identities in pop culture; one of the wealthiest recording artists alive (Lynch, 2014), as well as being widely considered in the hip-hop community to be a contender for the greatest rapper of all time. However, his rags to riches life story includes a checkered past,…

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    Subcultures can form and create their own individual influences, but movement between social classes can still be hampered by circumstances. When a subculture is one-way, that small society based on what they represent can either raise or lower the social class ranking of an individual, as some colleges either still have or did have a section that asked if “you faced any hardships in your life” (Cotter, 2013; Mini Lover, 2007) and if you were lucky enough to be born into a low social ranking,…

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    My opinion about this concept is that cool changes so quickly and once everyone has it and it’s so popular it’s not cool anymore so they come up with something new that is better and even more popular. 2)…

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    The Nickelodeon Theaters are significant to the evolution of American popular culture because they allowed Americans to experience modernity, and facilitated the formation of a national identity by transcending race and class lines. The theater served as an arena to disseminate cultural ideology to a diverse group of individuals, comprised of immigrants, the working class and American youth. The large scope of the theaters aided in consolidating the different cultural norms that separated rural…

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    Firefly Research Paper

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    Firefly: The Best of both Worlds Popular culture introduces individuals to communities, heck it helps create communities. Think about the TV shows and the bands you like, you are drawn to others who also enjoy those things, right? Just like fables and fairytales, shows like Firefly, the Simpsons, Parks and Rec, or Avatar bring people together through common interests and viewings. TV shows and movies have created huge communities around them and have given people who are literally across the…

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    Today, the animated 20th century American political culture revolves around the widely accepted idea of an ongoing culture war among states and voters alike. The term of a “culture war” is most commonly and enthusiastically used by the journalistic community and is defined as the displacement of ordinary economic conflicts by moral and religious ones in the advanced democracy. Moreover, news, media and other political studies seek to represent pictorially and statistically a deeply divided…

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    larger world of the dominant culture." Subcultures can form around any interest or activity, and they have their own values and norms that its members share, which gives them a common identity. They often use special terms to communicate. Although most subcultures are compatible with the values and norms of the mainstream culture, some are not. These are considered to be countercultures, which are subcultures whose values or activities go against the mainstream culture. Members of the…

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