Folk and Popular Culture: Woman With Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, With Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster
Folk and Popular Culture: Woman With Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, With Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster
Folk and Popular Culture: Woman With Oxcart, Myanmar Insanely Rad Scot, With Kilt and Three-Fin Thruster
Guatemalan Market
Agricultural: fields,
terraces, grain storage
Dwellings: historically
created from local
materials: wood, brick,
stone, skins; often
uniquely and
traditionally arranged;
always functionally
tied to physical
environment.
FOLK ARCHITECTURE
FOLK FOOD
Fig. 4-6: Annual hog production is influenced by religious taboos against pork
consumption in Islam and other religions. The highest production is in China,
which is largely Buddhist.
Taboo – a restriction on behavior
imposed by social custom.
Fig. 4-14: Television has diffused widely since the 1950s, but some areas still have
low numbers of TVs per population.
A Mental Map of Hip Hop
Fig. 4-3: This mental map places major hip hop performers near other similar performers
and in the portion of the country where they performed.
Popular Culture
Effects on Landscape: breeds homogenous,
“placeless” (Relph, 1976), landscape
Complex network of roads and highways
Commercial Structures tend towards ‘boxes’
Dwellings may be aesthetically suggestive of older
folk traditions
• Planned and Gated Communities more and more
common
Disconnect with landscape: indoor swimming
pools, desert surfing.
Surfing in Tempe, Arizona
Are places still tied to local landscapes?
McDonald’s, Tokyo, Japan
Palm Springs, CA
Fiji
Marboloro Man in Egypt
Cultural Identity:
Race and Ethnicity
• Culture groups
– Few or many characteristics (language, religion,
race, food, etc.)
– Subculture
• Races
– Single species
– Secondary biological characteristics
• Ethnic groups
– Ethnocentrism
What race are
these guys?
Race
• Does not exist on a scientific level,
despite influence of the idea.
• Biological variation is real; the order we impose on this
variation by using the concept of race is not. Race is a
product of the human mind, not of nature.
•Based on a three category system developed in Europe in
the 18th century: caucasians, mongoloids, and blacks.
• The truth is that there is very little fundamental genetic
variety between humans and no way to tell where one
category stops and another begins. Race is literally skin
deep. There has not been enough time for much genetic
variation. We do not have distinct “races” or “subspecies.”
Race in the U.S.
•Genetic mixing is so
common and complete that
Rosa Parks most geographers dismiss
race as a category since it
can not be clearly tied to
place.