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The Culture Industry

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Title: The Culture Industry


1
The Culture Industry
  • COMU2020 Phil Graham
  • Week 7

2
Context
  • The piece is first published in 1947 following
    WWII.
  • Adorno and Horkheimer are German refugees living
    in the US
  • Movies have become very sophisticated
  • Leni Riefenstahl pioneers the blockbuster
    propaganda technique with Triumph of the Will (cf
    triumph of invested capital p. 124)
  • Television is new and has yet to develop its
    genres
  • Monopoly of production and distribution becomes
    overt

3
Key Points I
  • By being industrialised, culture takes on a
    quantitative, formulaic, technologised form. Aims
    at repeatability and predictability.
  • All products are therefore alike and exist to
    promote themselves and the system they represent.
    This results in the freedom to choose what is
    always the same (p. 167).
  • The industry adopts a technological rationale
    for this, but at the same time claims this is
    done to satisfy the spontaneous wishes of the
    public (pp. 120-122)
  • First to notice that audiences are a product of
    media industries. Dallas Smythe realises this
    again in 1981 (Smythe, 1981).

4
Key Points II
  • Culture becomes mass education interesting
    point
  • Culture becomes publicity
  • Uses Nazi propaganda to illuminate the amplifying
    aspects of mass media, especially in respect of
    language (that is so not cool)
  • Means of assisting free markets to an end
    compares advertising in a competitive market as
    informing people of differences compares this
    with the role advertising in monopoly capitalism
    that of creating false differences.
  • Notes the impact on ditributions of power the
    culture industry ensures power remains in the
    same hands (p. 162)

5
Politics of culture
  • Culture industries provide a dynamic definition
    of what is desirable in people, places,
    thingsDiscourse in general.

2004 1960 1955
6
Beauty (?) II
  • Mr Universes

1960 1970 2000
7
Producing tastes
  • The stronger the positions of the culture
    industry become, the more summarily it can deal
    with consumers needs, producing them,
    controlling them, disciplining them, and even
    withdrawing amusement no limits are set to
    cultural progess of this type (p. 144)
  • What do you want?
  • Answers
  • WHY do you want those things?
  • WHAT is the the basis of those desires?
  • HOW do you know about the objects of your desire?
  • WHEN do you want them?
  • WHERE do you see youself when and if you have
    these?

8
Critique
  • The idea that media industries shape desires and
    attitudes is abhorrent to many people.
  • This is called media determinism
  • That means that the media determine our tastes
    and desires and that we are passive receptacles.
  • Is that true?
  • If so, why and to what degree?
  • If not, why not?

9
Political economy of culture
  • The diachronic transition from the concrete
    commodity-forms of Marxs day to the more
    abstract cultural commodities of late capitalism
    creates an increased
  • immediacy that takes the place of the
    mediated, exchange- value itself. If the
    commodity in general combines exchange- value and
    use value, then the pure use value, whose
    illusion the cultural goods must preserve in a
    completely capitalist society, must be replaced
    by pure exchange-value, which precisely in its
    capacity of exchange-value deceptively takes
    over the function of use value (Adorno, 1991, p.
    34).
  • In other words, the culture industries
    facilitate more and more intricate forms of human
    activity to be rendered as part of the labour
    process.

10
Conclusions
  • The culture industry was a shock to the people
    who noted what was happening at a political
    economic level in the development of mass
    mediations
  • This was amplified by the success of propaganda
    campaigns in WWI and WWII
  • There is a close relationship between new media,
    culture industries, language, and the meaning of
    being human
  • In this sense, it important that, as
    professionals, you create mass communication
    instruments with this in mind.
  • There are practical reasons for this, including
    the capacity for creativity, the ethics of labour
    appropriation, and the, owneship of leisure the
    lack of a creative society means the lack of
    creative producers and consumers it can create
    intellectual morbidity.

11
References and suggested readings
  • Adorno, T. W. (1991). The culture industry
    Selected essays on mass culture. London
    Routledge.
  • Carey, J. (1989), Communication as Culture.
    London Routledge
  • Smythe, D. (1981). Dependency Road Capitalism,
    Communication, Culture, and Canada. New York
    Ablex
  • Hart, K. (2000). The memory bank Money in an
    unequal world. London Profile
  • Graham, P. (2000). A Bunch of Notes and Quotes
    III Labour. LNC http//www.cddc.vt.edu/host/lnc/p
    apers/notes3.htm
  • Jarvis, S. (1998). Adorno A critical
    introduction. London Polity.
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