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FORMS
Film
Music
Sports
Comix
Fashion
Television
Advertising
Cyberculture
Miscellaneous
ISSUES
Race
Class
Gender
Sexuality
Censorship
Imperialism
ANALYSIS
Textual
Historical
Audiences
Production
RESOURCES
Courses
Journals
Activism
Key Sites
Bibliography
 

Popular Culture:
Resources for Critical Analysis

Corporate America flag

Courtesy of Adbusters.org
  The website provides resources for the critical analysis of popular culture in the US, including the impact of that culture beyond national borders.

Resources include sites on various forms of popular culture including music, film, television, advertising, sports, fashion, toys, magazines and comic books, and the medium in which this message moves, cyberculture.

The site focuses on issues of race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, cultural imperialism and censorship, as shaped by and reflected in various mass media.

This site also includes sections that introduce and give resources for four main types or elements of popular culture analysis: production analysis, textual analysis, audience analysis, and historical analysis (of the first three dimensions as they change over time).

I have also included links to on-line pop culture courses, to journals treating popular culture, to other key sites for cultural analysis, and to media activist resources.

Use the navigation bar on the left to reach sites in all these areas.

As with all Internet sites, the locations referenced vary in quality and usefulness. Some are commercial sites valuable more as objects of knowledge than as producers of knowledge. Others are academic sites that teach ways to analyze pop culture, or offer substantial resources for doing your own analyses.

Since the Internet seldom, if ever, provides all the information needed on a given topic, I also strongly recommend that you consult my bibliography of books on popular culture, and use that old-fashioned, non-virtual space known as the library.

On most pages in this site you will find parodies of advertisements. Some are aimed at the specific advertising practice represented, and some at questionable practices of the corporation sponsoring the ad. And all are aimed to remind us that a precious new public space, the World Wide Web, is in danger of becoming another space where only corporate free speech is protected. Most of the parodies are courtesy of AdBusters, with a few from other parody sites found on the "Advertising" page.


SPECIAL RESOURCES: The tragic events of September 11th have generated a flurry of "coverage" in the mass media and popular culture. For an excellent website seeking to sort out and analyze these media messages see, re:constructions.

The current war/occupation in Iraq has also generated crucial media questions. On this topic, I recommend the Critical Media Literacy in a Time of War site.


This guide was created by Professor T. V. Reed as part of the course American Popular Culture taught at Washington State University. It is also one of the “Web projects” of the American Studies program at WSU.

The site list is frequently updated, so I welcome suggestions for additions, corrections, and other changes. You can e-mail us at: reedtv@wsu.edu

 

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