Popular culture has been alternately condemned as too trivial to warrant attention and too powerful to resist. Its consumers have been dubbed fashion victims, couch potatoes, and victims of propaganda. This course considers these critiques, as well as those that suggest that popular culture can be emancipatory, allowing for the creation and renegotiation of meaning. Over the course of the semester, we consider the impacts of various forms of popular culture, and discuss their effects on how we see ourselves and others. We explore the ever-shifting distinctions between high, middlebrow, and low culture and analyze how power and resistance structure the production and consumption of popular texts.
Program:
Format:
Online
Term:
Summer 2025
Session:
Summer Session I: May 27 – July 2, 2025
Subject Area:
COMMUNICATIONS (COMM)
Course Number:
COMM 1230 910
Schedule:
Tuesday 5:15 - 9:05 p.m.
Thursday 5:15 - 9:05 p.m.
Primary Program:
LPS Undergraduate & Post-Baccalaureate
Course Description: