Dance party as a popular youth Culture in the great Gatsby and saturday Night Fever
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Abstract
This research work examines dance party as a popular youth culture in Luhrmann
directed The Great Gatsby and John Badham directed movie Saturday Night Fever.
This study examines the inherent connections between the dance party and American
life of the youths. It implies how dance party as a popular youth culture becomes
integral part of American life in twentieth century urban America. Exploring the
cinematic techniques of camera and its movement, it applies the theoretical
approaches of popular culture defined by John Storey in his book Cultural Theory and
Popular Culture who views popular culture as widely favored or well-liked by many
people. It also studies how dance parties as a popular culture is represented in both
movies by the lens of the camera and its techniques. While doing this, it has applied
the theoretical approach implied by Stuart Hall in his book Representation: Cultural
Representation and Signifying Practices. Hall argues that representation is an
essential part of the process by which meaning is produced and exchanged between
members of a culture. The chief beneficiaries of this research work include culture
researchers, concerned stakeholders, humanities students and policy makers. It has a
tremendous prospect to promote dance parties as a popular youth culture.
Keywords: popular youth culture, movies, dance party, representation
