The study of how cultural products and practices are created, distributed, and consumed by large populations, and how these processes shape society. Popular culture isn't just
entertainment; it's a social institution that produces meaning, creates identities, and organizes
social life. The sociology of popular culture examines how culture industries work (who makes what, why, for whom), how audiences interpret cultural products (differently, creatively, sometimes against the grain), and how popular culture reflects and shapes social divisions (class, race, gender, generation). It also examines the globalization of popular culture—how Hollywood, K-pop, and Bollywood travel the world, creating both cultural homogenization and new hybrid forms. Popular culture is where society tells itself stories about itself; the sociology helps
read between the lines.
Example: "She studied the sociology of
popular culture and saw her favorite shows
differently—not just as
entertainment but as social texts revealing who we are, what we fear, what we desire. The hit shows about zombies? Anxiety about collapse. The obsession with true crime? Fear of strangers. The streaming algorithms? Segregating audiences by taste, creating cultural bubbles. She still watched, but she watched with eyes open."