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发表于 2017-8-5 22:02:55 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
『媒体形式的多样化,使人们能接触到主流文化之外的多种文化,这是否会削弱主流文化对人们的凝聚作用?』
Making the Monoculture
Oct 16th, 2011 | From The Economist

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  THE proliferation of media, enabled by the internet and the new  consumer devices that access it, has also driven the decentralization of  media. As recently as 15 years ago, if you wanted to catch up on the  news, you could look at a handful of publications or a few nightly  programmes. And if you wanted to listen to music, you could turn on MTV  or fiddle with your radio. People in major cities had more options,  because a large population can support specialty shops, but in vast  swathes of the world you had to work to get outside the mainstream.
  Today, as we all know, access to information has exploded. One  consequence, according to Touré, a cultural critic writing in Salon, is  that the ability of pop culture to unify us—he refers to the massive  interest in Michael Jackson"s Thriller, or Nirvana's Nevermind—has been  eroded, probably forever. Steven Hyden counters that whatever the  advantages and disadvantages of a centralised pop-culture authority, the  monoculture never actually existed.
I think Mr Hyden is  correct that the concept of a "monoculture" is a bit of a myth. Even  when it supposedly existed, its content largely depended on other  characteristics of your little corner of the world. In the 1992-1993  school year, I was a student at a multiracial and relatively urban  junior high school in California's central valley. We listened to  Salt-n-Pepa, Snoop Doggy Dogg, and Kris Kross, with the latter having  inspired a trend in which kids wore their clothes backwards. The next  year I was enrolled in a mostly white junior high school in leafy  Chicago suburb. One of the houses was famous for having appeared in the  1990 film "Home Alone"; the popular bands were Nirvana, Hole and the  Smashing Pumpkins; and the biggest pop-cultural event of the school year  was Kurt Cobain's suicide.
But Toure's point is about the  virtues of common cultural experience. It seems he's reminiscing about  centralised media only insofar as it's a distribution system that  fostered that outcome. And it's true that the ways we now consume pop  culture to some extent level the playing field. It doesn't matter  whether a record is released by an important label or an indie: if it's  online, people can usually find, forward, share and promote it. But  what's interesting—and perhaps surprising, given that both Touré and Mr  Hyden seem to agree that the old distribution favoured big media—is that  we still have widely shared cultural experiences. This summer Katy  Perry, a pop singer, tied Michael Jackson's record for having five #1  singles from the same album (Teenage Dream in Ms Perry's case, and Bad  in Jackson's). Or think of Barack Obama doing the little hand gesture  from Beyonce's "Single Ladies" video.
That suggests that we  like pop culture partly because it's a shared experience, regardless of  quality. This seems to be a feature that is burnished by nostalgia and  reinforced by additional rounds of criticisms and analysis. So it may be  that the things we think of as part of a previous era's monoculture  were actually merely popular at the time. We can argue that Nevermind  was the most influential album of 1991, or the best, but it wasn't as  big as Garth Brooks's Ropin' the Wind. In Britain in 1995 Oasis released  (What's the Story) Morning Glory?; Radiohead released The Bends; Pulp,  Different People; Blur, The Great Escape. Each of these albums holds up  pretty well and has plenty of fans. But the biggest-selling album in  Britain that year was Robson & Jerome's self-titled debut. It's safe  to say that the monoculture never really existed, and that some artists  still reach a wide audience, whether we like it or not.(672 words)
文章地址:http://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero/2011/10/popular-concerns-0
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