Preview

Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law

Advanced search

Mass Culture as a Symbolic Environment of the Younger Generation Political Socialization

Abstract

Nowadays mass culture is becoming a significant tool for influencing the consciousness and behavior of the masses, especially young people. The commercialization of mass culture leads to a noticeable decrease in the quality of its content, as well as to the loss of any regulatory control in this area. This fact requires a serious study of what images and content of mass culture dominate in the minds of the Russian youth, how the mechanism of worldview creation and how the formation of their own social identity work. Within the framework of this article, the main approaches to determining the role of mass culture in the process of political socialization of youth in Russia are highlighted starting with studies emphasizing the purely targeted nature of the impact of cultural orientations on young people, to works stating the comprehensive nature of mass culture. It is concluded that modern approaches to the study of mass culture are largely focused on conceptualization and the search for universal explanations of the principles of its functioning (commercialization, contextuality, accessibility, the formation of conventions in the framework of communication, etc.). At the same time, the work records the main intergenerational differences in leisure activities and the choice of its specific forms, different for the generation of “fathers” and the generation of “children”. This fact also significantly affects the information and cultural consumption of representatives of different generations. At the same time, for young people, the consumption of certain cultural samples is mainly determined by the availability of relevant artifacts and social influence (fashion, environment, social contacts, etc.).

About the Authors

I. I. Kuznetsov
Lomonosov Moscow State University; Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN)
Russian Federation

Igor I. KUZNETSOV, DSc in Political Science, Professor of History and Theory of Politics Department Faculty of Political Science; Leading Researcher of Political Science Department

Lomonosovsky Avenue, 27, building 4, Moscow, 119991; 
Nakhimovsky Avenue, 51/21, Moscow, 117418



E. V. Kulikova
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN)
Russian Federation

Elizaveta V. KULIKOVA, Master of Political Science Junior Researcher of Political Science Department

Nakhimovsky Avenue, 51/21, Moscow, 117418



Iu. V. Petrova
Lomonosov Moscow State University; Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN)
Russian Federation

Iuliia V. PETROVA, PhD Student of the Department of History and Theory of Politics Faculty of Political Science;
Junior Researcher of Political Science Department

Lomonosovsky Avenue, 27, building 4, Moscow, 119991; 
Nakhimovsky Avenue, 51/21, Moscow, 117418



References

1. Astafyeva O.N. (2013). Medialogy as a Synthesis of Sciences: In The Lens of Changing Socio-cultural Reality. Kulturologicheskiy zhurnal, no. 1, pp. 1–8 (in Russian).

2. Baudrillard J. (2020). Consumer Society. Moscow : AST Publishing House, 320 pp. (in Russian).

3. Bell D. (2004). The Coming of PostIndustrial Society. Moscow : Academia, 944 pp. (in Russian).

4. Benjamin V. (1996). A work of art in the era of its technical reproducibility. Selected essays. Moscow : Medium, 316 pp. (in Russian).

5. Castells M. (2000). The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture. Moscow : Higher School of Economics, 608 pp. (in Russian).

6. Debor G. (1999). The Society of the Performance. Moscow : Logos Publishing House, 224 pp. (in Russian).

7. Gorshkov M.K., Sheregi F.E. (2020). Youth of Russia: on the results of long-term research. Moscow : Institute of Socio-Political Studies of the Federal Research Sociological Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 688 pp. (in Russian).

8. Hall S. (1980). Culturology and the Center: some problems. Culture, Media, Language. London : Hutchinson, pp. 2–35.

9. Horkheimer M., Adorno T. (1997). Dialectics of Enlightenment. Philosophical fragments. Moscow, St. Petersburg : Medium, Juventa, 312 pp. (in Russian).

10. Ilyin A.N. (2009). Hierarchical Model of Mass Culture. Srednerusskij vestnik obshhestvennyh nauk, no. 2, pp. 67–75 (in Russian).

11. Ilyin V.I. (2010). The Russian Hinterland in the Social Structure of Russia. Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology, vol. 13, no. 4, pp. 25–47 (in Russian).

12. Ionin L.G. (1998). Sociology of Culture: A Textbook. 2nd edition. Moscow : Logos Publishing Corporation, 280 pp. (in Russian).

13. Kheveshi M.A. (2001). Crowd, Masses, Politics: A Historical and Philosophical Essay. Moscow : Institute of Philosophy of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 224 pp. (in Russian).

14. Kukarkin A.V. (1985). Bourgeois Mass Culture: Theories. Ideas. Varieties. Samples. Technic. Business. Moscow : Politizdat, 399 pp. (in Russian).

15. Kul’tura… (1990). Yearbook “Culture, traditions, education”. Moscow : Publishing House of the Research Institute of Culture, 263 pp. (in Russian).

16. Kuznetsov I.I. (2021). Political Consciousness of Russian Students: Public Solidarity, Trust, Interaction. Bulletin of Tomsk State University. Philosophy. Sociology. Political science, no. 59, pp. 237–252 (in Russian).

17. Lebon G. (1995). The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind. St. Petersburg : Maket, 311 pp. (in Russian).

18. Lukov V.A. (2018). Mass Culture in Modern Society: Youth Aspect. Horizons of Humanitarian Knowledge, no. 5, pp. 53–66 (in Russian).

19. MacDonald D. (1990). Masscult and Midcult. Russian Yearbook’90, issue 2, Moscow : Sovetskaja Rossija, pp. 243–275 (in Russian).

20. Marcuse H. (2002). One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society. Moscow : AST Publishing House, 526 pp. (in Russian).

21. Massovaja kul’tura… (2005). Zvereva V.V. (ed.). Popular Culture: Modern Western Studies. Moscow : Fond nauchnych issledovaniy “Pragmatika kul’tury”, 339 pp. (in Russian).

22. Massovaya kul’tura… (2004). Akopyan A.V. [et. al.]. Mass Culture: Studies Manual. Moscow : Alpha-M; INFRA-M, 304 pp. (in Russian).

23. McLuhan M. (2004). The Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man. Kiev : Nika-Center, 432 pp. (in Russian).

24. McLuhan M. (2019). Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man. Moscow : Kuchkovo pole, 464 pp. (in Russian).

25. Molodezh’… (2020). Omel’chenko Ye.L. (ed.). Youth in the city: culture, scenes and solidarity. Moscow : Publishing House of the Higher School of Economics, 502 pp. (in Russian).

26. Nechai O.F. (1984). Brilliance and Poverty of “Mass Culture”. Minsk : Nauka i tehnika, 141 pp. (in Russian).

27. Orlova E.A. (2004). Cultural (Social) Anthropology: A Textbook for Universities. Moscow : Akademicheskij Proekt, 480 pp. (in Russian).

28. Orlova E.A. (2012). Sociology of Culture. Moscow : Akademicheskij Proekt, 575 pp. (in Russian).

29. Ornatskaya L.A. (2001). Mass Culture and the “Spirit of the Epoch”. Russian Mass Culture of the Late Twentieth Century. Materials of the “round table”. December 4, 2001. St. Petersburg : St. Petersburg Philosophical Society, pp. 129–133 (in Russian).

30. Ortega y Gasset J. (1991a). Aesthetics. Philosophy of Culture. Moscow : Izdatel’stvo “Iskusstvо”, 588 pp. (in Russian).

31. Ortega y Gasset J. (1991b). Dehumanization of Art. Essays on Literature and Art. Moscow : Raduga, 639 pp. (in Russian).

32. Poisk knig v Internete… (2022). Mediaskope. Search for Books on the Internet (in Russian). Available at: https://mediascope.net/library/presentations/Auditoria_knig_v_internete_Mediascope.pdf, accessed 10.15.2022.

33. Radaev V.V. (2020). Millennials: How Russian Society Is Changing. Moscow : Publishing House of the Higher School of Economics, 224 pp. (in Russian).

34. Rainov B.N. (1979). Mass Culture. Moscow : Progress, 488 pp. (in Russian).

35. Razlogov K.E. (2010). The Art of the Screen. Moscow : ROSSPEN, 287 pp. (in Russian). Samoreguljacija… (2022).

36. Zubok Yu.A. [et al.]. Self-Regulation in the Youth Environment: Typologization and Modeling; Institute of Socio-Political Studies of the Federal Research Sociological Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Belgorod : “Epicenter”, 360 pp. (in Russian).

37. Shapinskaya E.N. (2017). Mass Culture: Theories and Practices. Moscow : Soglasie, 386 pp. (in Russian).

38. Sorokin P.A. (2000). Social and Cultural Dynamics: A Study of Change in Major Systems of Art, Truth, Ethics, Law, and Social Relationships. St. Petersburg : RHGI, 431 pp. (in Russian).

39. Tard G. (2015). Public opinion and the crowd. Moscow : LENAND, 208 pp. (in Russian).

40. Tulchinsky G.L. (2006). Marketing and Mass Culture. Vestnik ChGAKI, no. 2 (10), pp. 54–66 (in Russian).

41. Zakharov A.V. (2003). Mass Society and Culture in Russia, Voprosy Filosofii, no. 9, pp. 3–16 (in Russian).

42. Zubok Yu.A., Chuprov V.I. (2018). Culture in the Life of Youth: Need, Interest, Value. Bulletin of the Institute of Sociology, no. 4, pp. 170–191 (in Russian).


Review

For citations:


Kuznetsov I.I., Kulikova E.V., Petrova I.V. Mass Culture as a Symbolic Environment of the Younger Generation Political Socialization. Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law. 2022;15(5):68-88. (In Russ.)

Views: 736


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2542-0240 (Print)
ISSN 2587-9324 (Online)