What a person "likes" or "expects" is in part due to familiarization. We generally have to be subjected to something (whether directly or not) before determining a "like" in any case.
You are also ignoring the various pressures to conform to prevalent "norms" that exist in society. Entertainment can definitely affect what is perceived as "norms".
You are also ignoring the various pressures to conform to prevalent "norms" that exist in society. Entertainment can definitely affect what is perceived as "norms".
These norms had to arrive from some place before entertainment picks it up. I'm sure you are aware, if you watch TV, that the entertainment industry is, for the most part, very, very, very conservative. The "edgy" entertainment is usually done by smaller and more independent houses. If they are shown to be popular, they are picked up by the big time entertainment industry.
The "entertainment industry" isn't going to take too many chances, especially not with all the money at stake.
In some cases violence is a necessary act to protect yourself or others. That is not a glorification, and can even show violence in a negative light, as a necessary evil to be avoided as much as possible.
Even the violence used to protect others has been glorified in American cinema. Look at the old westerns. Not many showed it as "necessary evil", but the played up the myth of the old gunslingers.
Clint Eastwood's "Unforgiven" was a direct response to the idea that arose from those old westerns. That the gunslinging and killing "bad guys" was cool. The kid in that movie showed that normal American male and how he'd actually react in a far more true situation.
I mean actually watch some of those old westerns to see how violence was shown to be a positive. The "necessarily evil" movies really didn't come until later and were in response to what was seen as too much positive light towards violent behavior, even in putting away the bad man.
And the necessarily evil movies don't sell all that way either .
That is a glorification of violence. Which as I said, did happen.
They also are considered to be some of the best archetypes of the western genre in the 60s.
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