• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

High Culture and Popular Culture

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
As you have been reading the latest journal of, Science, you have probably come across a study conducted by social psychologists at the New School for Social Research in New York City.

The study found that high culture increased empathy, social perception, and emotional intelligence, while popular culture failed on all counts.

And mbti is popular culture which fails to foster empathy, social perception, and emotional intelligence.

And yet so many here give personal testimony (in the Protestant tradition) that mbti fosters empathy, social perception and emotional intelligence.

So perhaps we are plagued by group think and confirmation bias.
 

Thursday

Earth Exalted
Joined
Mar 14, 2008
Messages
3,960
MBTI Type
ENTJ
Enneagram
8w9
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
There are many cultures, both high and low, that reflect the qualities that the other swears by, but hardly displays. In short, the culture is only as good as its poster-children and those who toe the pious line that is outlined for them.
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
There are many cultures, both high and low, that reflect the qualities that the other swears by, but hardly displays. In short, the culture is only as good as its poster-children and those who toe the pious line that is outlined for them.

Nah.

Popular culture is impoverished, while high culture is enriching.

Popular culture relies on technique, while high culture is existential.

Popular culture relies on one point of view, while high culture gives us many points of view.

Popular culture is directed at the lowest common denominator, while high culture is for the cultivated.

Popular culture is for money, while high culture is for the human spirit.

Popular culture is manipulative and exploitative, while high culture appeals to the best in us.

High culture lasts while popular culture has a use-by date.

So make a date with high culture today, and tell them Mole sent you.
 

21%

You have a choice!
Joined
May 15, 2009
Messages
3,224
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
What's 'high culture' anyway? :huh:
 

cafe

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
9,827
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
It is extraordinary that popular culture has such sway that we are ignorant of even the existence of high culture.

Yep. What are some examples or high culture? Google isn't helping me much with this.
 

Mole

Permabanned
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
20,284
Yep. What are some examples or high culture? Google isn't helping me much with this.

Let's take just one field: literature. I am sure you can think of a book that is high culture and a book that is popular culture.

So why do you ask a question you know the answer to? The answer is: it is a rhetorical question, feigning ignorance to make a point.

Or worse, it is a dog whistle to those who loathe high culture.

Or perhaps it is a kind of inverse snobbery.

Or even a reaction formation to feelings of inferiority.

Who knows?
 

cafe

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
9,827
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
Let's take just one field: literature. I am sure you can think of a book that is high culture and a book that is popular culture.

So why do you ask a question you know the answer to? The answer is: it is a rhetorical question, feigning ignorance to make a point.

Or worse, it is a dog whistle to those who loathe high culture.

Or perhaps it is a kind of inverse snobbery.

Or even a reaction formation to feelings of inferiority.

Who knows?
I don't know. I'm not terribly educated. I have a two year degree in general studies from a rural community college. So basically, all high culture means to me is that it's old. But surely not everything that is old is high culture? So that is why I asked. I looked and couldn't find anything specific.
 

FDG

pathwise dependent
Joined
Aug 13, 2007
Messages
5,903
MBTI Type
ENTJ
Enneagram
7w8
But popular culture is much more immediately useful and fun!(and I don't mean the crap on tv, I mean all the good things that you can learn from agricultural and blue collar workers and how it's so much fun to hang out with them)
 

21%

You have a choice!
Joined
May 15, 2009
Messages
3,224
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
It is extraordinary that popular culture has such sway that we are ignorant of even the existence of high culture.

What I'm questioning is why we place higher value on some forms of culture while dismissing others as inferior. I understand where you're coming from, because sometimes I feel the same way, but isn't that a kind of an elitist attitude? Everyone's experience is different. If people prefer sweet sparkly wine rather than the more mature and delicate good wines, is it fair to judge them? If they identify more with Beyonce's music rather than Mozart's, is it fair to judge them? Culture is culture; art is art. I like to believe there is no high or low, because the effect of art is entirely individual.
 

Pseudo

New member
Joined
Jul 2, 2012
Messages
2,051
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w4
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
What I'm questioning is why we place higher value on some forms of culture while dismissing others as inferior. I understand where you're coming from, because sometimes I feel the same way, but isn't that a kind of an elitist attitude? Everyone's experience is different. If people prefer sweet sparkly wine rather than the more mature and delicate good wines, is it fair to judge them? If they identify more with Beyonce's music rather than Mozart's, is it fair to judge them? Culture is culture; art is art. I like to believe there is no high or low, because the effect of art is entirely individual.


Well said. Not to mention that people use "high culture" to discredit other people. Refined taste is partly just a way to maintain and in-group.
 
F

FigerPuppet

Guest
Let me provide a foundation on which you guys can continue the discussion, since none of you have bothered to do so yourselves (High Culture - Wikipedia):
In the Western tradition high culture has historical origins in the intellectual and aesthetic ideals of ancient Greece and Rome. Within this classical ideal certain authors and their modes of language were held up as models of an elevated style and good form as for instance the Attic dialect of ancient Greek associated with the great philosophers and dramatists of Periclean Athens, or Ciceronian Latin. Later, especially during the Renaissance, these values were deeply imbibed by the cultural upper classes, and (as evinced in works like The Courtier by Baldasare Castiglione) knowledge of the classics became part of the aristocratic ideal. Over time, the refined classicism of the Renaissance was expanded to embrace a broader canon of authors in the modern languages that included figures such as Shakespeare, Goethe, and Cervantes.

For centuries an immersion in high culture was deemed an essential part of the proper education of the gentleman, and this ideal was transmitted through high-status schools and institutions throughout Europe and the United States. As it has evolved, Western notions of high culture have been associated at various times with: The study of "humane letters" especially the Greek and Latin classics and more broadly all works considered to be part of "the canon"; the cultivation of refined etiquette and manners; an appreciation of the fine arts - especially sculpture and painting; a knowledge of such literature, drama, and poetry considered to be of high caliber; enjoyment of European classical music and opera; religion and theology often with a special focus on Europe's predominantly Christian tradition; rhetoric and politics; the study of philosophy and history; a taste for gourmet cuisine and wine; being well traveled and especially "The Grand Tour of Europe"; certain sports associated with the upper classes, such as polo, equestrianism, fencing, and yachting.


High culture and its relation to mass culture have been, in different ways, a central concern of much theoretical work in cultural studies, critical theory, media studies and sociology, as well as in postmodernism and in many strands of Marxist thought. It was especially central to the concerns of Walter Benjamin, whose 1935/36 essay The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction has been highly influential, as has the work of Theodor Adorno. Gramscianism can see ruling class culture as "an instrument of social control".[13]

High culture also became an important concept in political theory on nationalism for writers such as Ernest Renan and Ernest Gellner, who saw it as a necessary component of a healthy national identity. Gellner's concept of a high culture extended beyond the arts; he defined it in Nations and Nationalism (1983) as: "...a literate codified culture which permits context-free communication". This is a distinction between different cultures, rather than within a culture, contrasting high with simpler, agrarian low cultures.

Pierre Bourdieu's book: La Distinction (English translation: Distinction - A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste) (1979) is a study influential in sociology of another much broader, class-based, definition of high culture, or "taste", which includes etiquette, appreciation of fine food and wine, and even military service, but also references different social codes supposedly observed in the dominant class, and that are not accessible to the lower classes. This partly reflects a French conception of the term which is different from the more serious-minded Anglo-German concept of Arnold, Benjamin, Leavis or Bloom. Bourdieu introduced the concept of cultural capital, knowledge and habits acquired by a dominant class upbringing that his surveys in post-war France found led to increased relative social and economic success despite a supposedly egalitarian educational system.

The paper Mole is referencing must also have explained what they meant by high culture, so it would be even better if he could post those paragraphs since it is the conclusions of that specific paper you're discussing. Of course that won't be possible if all you have access to is the abstract.
 

Zarathustra

Let Go Of Your Team
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
Messages
8,110
What I'm questioning is why we place higher value on some forms of culture while dismissing others as inferior.

Well, I love both high and low culture, but he stated the reason directly in his OP: high culture breeds empathy, social perception, and emotional intelligence, while low culture does not. Of course, then he goes on to make the idiotic assertion, not at all supported by the paper in the OP, that Jungian psychology is low culture.

I understand where you're coming from, because sometimes I feel the same way, but isn't that a kind of an elitist attitude?

And?

Everyone's experience is different. If people prefer sweet sparkly wine rather than the more mature and delicate good wines, is it fair to judge them? If they identify more with Beyonce's music rather than Mozart's, is it fair to judge them? Culture is culture; art is art. I like to believe there is no high or low, because the effect of art is entirely individual.

If the world had more people who appreciated Mozart and the more mature and delicate good wines, I think it would be a better place.

I can't really say the same for Beyonce and the sweet sparkly.

(Which is not to say that I can't, won't, or don't appreciate Beyonce or a sweet sparkly wine)
 

Pseudo

New member
Joined
Jul 2, 2012
Messages
2,051
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w4
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
Well, I love both high and low culture, but he stated the reason directly in his OP: high culture breeds empathy, social perception, and emotional intelligence, while low culture does not. Of course, then he goes on to make the idiotic assertion, not at all supported by the paper in the OP, that Jungian psychology is low culture.



And?



If the world had more people who appreciated Mozart and the more mature and delicate good wines, I think it would be a better place.

I can't really say the same for Beyonce and the sweet sparkly.

(Which is not to say that I can't, won't, or don't appreciate Beyonce or a sweet sparkly wine)


What exactly does appreciation for "better" wine cultivate in a person besides snobbery?
 

Zarathustra

Let Go Of Your Team
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
Messages
8,110
What exactly does appreciation for "better" wine cultivate in a person besides snobbery?

Well, honestly, I don't give a shit much about good wines. I was just going with the examples she gave.

(Although, I do think one could cultivate an appreciation for good wines, and if, with that, there comes a desire to understand the history of wine, the process of making wine, the different kinds of wine, where they come from, what makes one wine better or worse than another, etc, that, done the right way, this could cultivate all kinds of good things)

High literature and music, tho: I do think those cultivate more than low literature and music.

Literature probably moreso than music.
 

Pseudo

New member
Joined
Jul 2, 2012
Messages
2,051
MBTI Type
INTP
Enneagram
5w4
Instinctual Variant
so/sx
Well, honestly, I don't give a shit much about good wines. I was just going with the examples she gave.

(Although, I do think one could cultivate an appreciation for good wines, and if, with that, there comes a desire to understand the history of wine, the process of making wine, the different kinds of wine, where they come from, what makes one wine better or worse than another, etc, that, done the right way, this could cultivate all kinds of good things)

High literature and music, tho: I do think those cultivate more than low literature and music.

Literature probably moreso than music.

I don't disagree that an appreciation for craftsman ship is good. Or that there are musical complexities in Mozart that are missing from say Kesha.

But on the other hand I think there also something to say for preferences. Just because someone understands musical complexity doesn't mean yet enjoy it. They might value the exuberance they find in say folk music, more. So while I agree that more complex ideas in high culture are valuable I don't agree with describing them as good and low culture is bad. I think there are about embracing different things and either one can be used properly or improperly.
 

Zarathustra

Let Go Of Your Team
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
Messages
8,110
I don't disagree that an appreciation for craftsman ship is good. Or that there are musical complexities in Mozart that are missing from say Kesha.

But on the other hand I think there also something to say for preferences. Just because someone understands musical complexity doesn't mean yet enjoy it. They might value the exuberance they find in say folk music, more. So while I agree that more complex ideas in high culture are valuable I don't agree with describing them as good and low culture is bad. I think there are about embracing different things and either one can be used properly or improperly.

And I don't think what you've said has anything to do with what I've said, nor with the OP.

The OP stated that a scientific report recently concluded that high culture increases empathy, social perception, and emotional intelligence, while low culture does not. I have not read this report, but I do believe high culture cultivates positive qualities far more readily than low culture -- while appreciating much of what low culture has to offer, and believing that some "low culture" is almost, in essence, high culture -- and that, as such, the world would probably be a better place if more people appreciated Mozart and Shakespeare, while the same cannot be said for Beyonce and People magazine.
 
S

Stansmith

Guest
I think it's best to just take the best out of culture in general, instead of restricting yourself to one or the other. There's value in both.
 

FDG

pathwise dependent
Joined
Aug 13, 2007
Messages
5,903
MBTI Type
ENTJ
Enneagram
7w8
What exactly does appreciation for "better" wine cultivate in a person besides snobbery?

If people buy better wine then traditional, smaller, historical winemakers earn more money and can keep their business going, which benefits the whole rural area (ftr I'm Italian so in the US it might be different). Plus, better wine is often just much better for your health (no sulfites etc.).
 
Top