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Co-Optation Underground Cultures Of All Types Are Essay

Co-Optation Underground cultures of all types are frequently co-optated in order to bring them into the mainstream. When an underground culture begins as something unique, that uniqueness is attractive to those who crave unique things and experience. These are the early adopters, and the influencers of others. These influencers then make that culture more attractive to the mainstream. Typically, co-optation occurs when business interests see the potential in something and then market a co-optated version of that to a mainstream audience. The essay on popular culture highlights hip hop music, which grew from an integrated street culture in the Bronx, was first co-optated by African-American urban youth in other cities, leaving out many of the culture's elements in favor of a focus on the fashion and music, and co-optation became even more pronounced when the music's underground popularity with white suburban audiences was noticed. This actually mirrored quite closely the development of rock'n'roll, a black musical form that needed to be co-optated to sell to white audiences...

There are a number of associations of this culture that are attractive to people who live away from the water -- freedom, sun, beaches, a carefree life. Surfers had their own lingo, were tanned and fit, and they got the girls. Despite being a niche sub-culture. This was a culture rife for co-optation. The irony of course is that surfers were co-optating elements of traditional Polynesian culture, including the Shaka or hang-ten sign, a traditional Hawaiian gesture. Statistics show that there are around 2 million surfers nationwide, with the surf apparel industry worth $8 billion, surfing culture has been co-opted well beyond the spending limits of the actual surf community. People who have never seen a decent wave wear Billabong, Quiksilver, Rip Curl and other brands that began life as strictly surfing brands. Surfing lingo became more widely…

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Jackson, R. (2013). Billabong's downfall may signal the death of the entire surfwear industry. Business Insider. Retrieved April 22, 2014 from http://www.businessinsider.com/billabong-demise-surfwear-2013-11

Woody, T. (2012). Surfing's toxic secret. Forbes. Retrieved April 22, 2014 from http://www.forbes.com/sites/toddwoody/2012/04/19/surfings-toxic-secret/
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