Theordor Adorno, who claimed that popular music produced industrially could never effectively challenge dominant meanings and values (ideologies). he may never have lived to watch pop stars or fame academy but he hated the 'standardization' of popular music which went 'through the mill' of an industry production process.
www.theory.org.uk
Adorno (1903-69) argued that
capitalism fed people with the products of a 'culture industry' - the opposite
of 'true' art - to keep them passively satisfied and politically apathetic.
Adorno saw that capitalism
had not become more precarious or close to collapse, as Marx had predicted.
Instead, it had seemingly become more entrenched. Where Marx had focussed on
economics, Adorno placed emphasis on the role of culture in securing the
status quo.Popular culture was identified
as the reason for people's passive satisfaction and lack of interest in
overthrowing the capitalist system.
Adorno suggested that
culture industries churn out a debased mass of unsophisticated,
sentimental products which have replaced the more 'difficult' and critical art
forms which might lead people to actually question social life.
False needs are
cultivated in people by the culture industries. These are needs which can be
both created and satisfied by the capitalist system, and which replace people's
'true' needs - freedom, full expression of human potential and creativity,
genuine creative happiness. Commodity fetishism
(promoted by the marketing, advertising and media industries) means that social
relations and cultural experiences are objectified in terms of money. We are
delighted by something because of how much it cost.
Popular media and music
products are characterised by standardisation (they are basically
formulaic and similar) and pseudo-individualisation (incidental
differences make them seem distinctive, but they're not).
Products of the culture
industry may be emotional or apparently moving, but Adorno sees this as
cathartic - we might seek some comfort in a sad film or song, have a bit of a
cry, and then feel restored again.
Boiled down to its most
obvious modern-day application, the argument would be that television leads
people away from talking to each other or questioning the oppression in their
lives. Instead they get up and go to work (if they are employed), come home and
switch on TV, absorb TV's nonsense until bedtime, and then the daily cycle
starts again.
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