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Culture and Stigma: Popular Culture and the Case of Comic Books

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Sociological Forum

This paper argues that a better articulated conception of stigma can enhance the analysis of popular culture. Beginning with the work on stigma by Erving Goffman and other scholars, the article contends that the stigma sometimes attached to the production and consumption of popular culture is distinct from the low status associated with certain forms of popular culture. Unlike low status, stigma discredits cultural forms and practitioners often rendering them problematic. This reassessment of stigma is applied and developed further through a study of comic books, showing the various ways stigma can operate in popular culture. The analysis suggests that stigma significantly impeded the evolution of the comic book as an art form, illustrating the potential negative effects of stigma in popular culture.

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Notes

  1. For histories published for the general market, see, for example, Daniels (1971); Robbins and Yronwode (1985); and Goulart (1986). Academic books on this history include Sabin (1993, 1996), Nyberg (1998), Pustz (1999), and Wright (2001).

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Lopes, P. Culture and Stigma: Popular Culture and the Case of Comic Books. Sociol Forum 21, 387–414 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11206-006-9022-6

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