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social cult 

a stupid phrase created by Hunter J Saxon
“i’m not invited cause it’s a social cult”
social cult by FakeName27 February 6, 2019

anti-social cult 

A private chat on the Danganronpa Roleplay Amino full of crackheads.
May terribly scar you.
My friend: Are you in any cults?
Me: Yes, I'm in the Anti-Social Cult.
My friends: Why

Social Cultology

An extension of cultology that examines society and social structures as systems that operate with cult-like dynamics—even when they lack a formal leader or explicit religious framework. Social cultology studies “open cults” (political parties, corporations, fandoms) and “public cults” (nationalism, consumerism, ideological movements) that demand loyalty, enforce orthodoxy, and punish dissent. It analyzes how social norms, rituals, and symbols function as control mechanisms, and how individuals internalize group beliefs as their own. Social cultology reveals that the dynamics of high‑control groups are not confined to small, isolated sects.
Example: “Using social cultology, he showed how a popular online fandom exhibited thought reform: members who questioned the star were publicly shamed, isolated, and eventually expelled.”
Social Cultology by Abzugal April 3, 2026

Social Sciences of Pop Culture

An interdisciplinary field that studies popular culture—television, music, film, comics, gaming, memes, fashion—using the tools of sociology, anthropology, political economy, and cultural studies. It examines how pop culture is produced (industries, labor, intellectual property), how it circulates (platforms, fandom, algorithms), and how it is consumed (identity, community, resistance). The social sciences of pop culture reject the high/low culture distinction, treating pop culture as a central site where meaning, power, and belonging are negotiated. It also studies phenomena like meme wars, stan culture, and the political economy of streaming.
Example: “Her social sciences of pop culture research traced how K‑pop fan communities organized mass purchasing and streaming campaigns not just out of devotion, but as a strategic response to platform algorithms that rewarded volume over depth.”

Sociology of Pop Culture

A subfield that applies sociological frameworks to analyze popular culture as a social phenomenon—how it reflects and shapes class, race, gender, and generational identities; how it is produced and distributed through industrial systems; and how audiences use it to construct meaning and community. The sociology of pop culture draws on theories of taste (Bourdieu), subcultures (Hebdige), and audience reception (Hall). It examines everything from the representation of social issues in television to the role of pop culture in political campaigns, treating pop culture as a serious object of sociological inquiry.

Example: “His sociology of pop culture research showed that the rise of ‘sad girl music’ on streaming platforms correlated with algorithmic playlists that rewarded emotional vulnerability—not just a cultural shift, but a structural one.”

Theory of Cultural Social Control

Looks at how shared symbols, stories, values, and traditions (high culture, folk culture, national myths) shape identity and desire, making certain social arrangements feel natural and inevitable. Control works here by framing the world in a way that makes the status quo seem like the only sensible or morally right way to live.
Theory of Cultural Social Control Example: The pervasive cultural narrative of the "American Dream" (work hard, pull yourself up by your bootstraps). This controls by making systemic economic failure feel like a personal moral failing. It discourages collective action (like unions) and support for robust social safety nets, because the culture insists success is purely individual, thereby preserving existing economic hierarchies.

Theory of Popular Cultural Social Control

A subset focusing on mass-produced, commercial culture—movies, music, TV, influencers, memes—as a vehicle for norms. It examines how the repetitive themes, archetypes, and consumer lifestyles promoted by pop culture create shared aspirations and anxieties, gently guiding tastes, relationships, and political views toward mainstream, market-friendly outcomes.
Theory of Popular Cultural Social Control Example: Reality TV shows that glorify extreme wealth, drama, and cosmetic surgery. They exert control by defining a new, pervasive "normal" for aspiration—creating widespread anxiety about one's own body, lifestyle, and social status. This channels energy into consumerism and personal makeover projects rather than critical thought or social change, aligning desires with market offerings.