Pop Culture: The Characteristics And Aspects Of Popular Culture

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Popular culture
Popular culture, according to Marsh and Alagona (167), involves all the values, customs, and usual ways of life that are unique to communities. Popular culture are found in large, urban populations that are heterogeneous, but do share the popular culture traits. Also it varies little from place to place but changes quickly. Popular culture does not reflect the local environment like folk culture, instead it’s more likely to modify or damage it because popular culture is not obtained from the local landscape but rather mass produced and imported into the local landscape (“Folk and Popular Culture”). A popular culture artifact, contrarily, refers to the items that a community and makes it stand out of the rest. One of such things …show more content…

Historically, the ancient communities hardly relied on the finished goods for food. Instead, the societies used the raw food material which they would cook to quench their hunger. The growth of certain crops, however, is primarily based on the geographical situation of the society. An example of food and agriculture from popular culture are industrial farming techniques based on hybrid seeds, mechanizations, and high levels of chemical use have spread all over the world (Folk and Popular Culture). Also in mass marketing of highly processed food, it leads to a cultural convergence of dietary habits worldwide along with associated health problems such as obesity, type two diabetes, and heart disease (Folk and Popular Culture). In particular, geographic variations come with a difference in the climatic conditions in the areas that are not geographically related. The resultant force is the ability to support the growth of certain foodstuffs that are unique to a climatic condition (Marsh and Alagona …show more content…

Looking at the high global population, there are different cultural and societal values and practices that define communities. The result is the apparent cultural diversity we witness in cities that house immigrants from various cross-border cultures. One important aspect of local culture, however, is that it is primarily based on the geography of the particular settings. Local culture are isolated groups that hardly change over time and ties to their physical environment. The routine practices of societies are responsible for the variation in the cultural beliefs of the different communities. However, the geography of the setting of the organizations plays such an integral role in supporting the practices that make societies unique. The uniqueness of the values and routine activities of the communities, to a large degree, depends on the mundane aspects of the locations that vary across the globe (Marsh and Alagona

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