Abstract

First, what is popular culture? It's Hallmark cards, James Whitcomb Riley, Edgar Guest, Robert W. Service, Joyce Kilmer, and Rod McKuen; it's the Katzinjammer Kids, Blondie, Snoopy, Popeye, Mickey Mouse, Pogo, Little Orphan Annie, and Doonesbury; it's Little Eva, the Hardy boys, Nancy Drew, Scarlet O'Hara, Tarzan, and Tom Swift; it's Daniel Boone, Kit Carson, Will Rogers, Tom Mix, Gene Autry, and Roy Rogers; it's Ellery Queen, Perry Mason, Nero Wolfe, and Sam Spade. It's Amos and Andy, Inner Sanctum, Jack Benny, and Fibber McGee and Molly; it's the Miss America Pageant, Showboat, Oklahoma, the Ice Capades, and Barnum and Bailey's Circus; it's Bing Crosby, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, and Linda Ronstadt; it's Bessie Smith, Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, and Ella Fitzgerald; it's Dixie, Swanee River, and Carry Me Back to Old Virginny; it's Marilyn Monroe, Cecil B. De Mille, Clark Gable, and John Wayne. It's One Man's Family, Gangbusters, and Mr. District Attorney; it's Johnny Carson, Walter Cronkite, Lawrence Welk, and Liberace; it's Star Trek, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Star Wars, and The Martian Chronicles; it's Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Loretta Lynn, Willie Nelson, and Grand Ole Opry; it's Dragnet, I Love Lucy, Bonanza, All in the Family, and the Super Bowl; it's Reader's Digest, Life, Saturday Evening Post, National Inquirer, and Playboy. Popular culture owes its existence to the concentration, beginning in the eighteenth century, of middle-class audiences in metropolitan areas; it owes its vitality to its increasingly rapid diffusion through the mass media. Its content ranges in spectra from banal to bizarre, sentimental to hard-

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