Karl Marx developed an economic and socio-political view that he believed would improve society. (Mandel, 1974) He viewed life as a constant struggle between the classes as they competed to improve their overall condition. According to Marx, capitalism led to the oppression of the working class and that, because they controlled the tools of production, allowed the minority ruling class to control the behavior and lives of the majority. One of the things that allowed the ruling class to successfully control the workers was through the use of popular culture.
Popular culture is ever changing and is specific to a particular time and place. Although a specific definition of what constitutes popular culture is difficult to formulate it is easy to describe where it is best reflected. A society's popular culture is found in its film, television, music and publishing media. Simply, if something appeals to a broad spectrum of individuals it is quite likely consider part of the popular culture
Karl Marx viewed popular culture negatively. He believed that it served to enforce and justify the prevailing political ideology and existing power structure. Marx claimed that popular culture controls the masses silently and insidiously and helped keep the common people ignorant of their actual situation. To Marx the social institutions that comprise popular culture are merely tools to maintain the status quo.
In Marx's view capitalists control both the market and demand. Through the use of advertising and the media in general, capitalists make the workers perceive what their needs are. That is, capitalists make workers think they need thing that they really do not need. In the process the capitalists make more profits and the workers situation worsens.
Under strict Marxist theory, this cycle of the capitalists controlling...
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