Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dark_culture> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 triples per page.
- Dark_culture abstract "The term dark culture (German Schwarze Szene, Portuguese cultura obscura, Spanish escena oscura), also called dark alternative scene, is an umbrella term, used to describe a summary of parts of several subcultures. In this context the \"culture\" is not to be understood as closed subculture, but as social environment, a milieu, which comprises people with similar interests and preferences (e.g. dark music).Dark culture includes:the goth and dark wave cultureelektro subculture (with genres like electro-industrial, aggrotech and dark electro)parts of the neofolk and post-industrial subculturesThe scene's origin lies in followers of dark wave and independent music, but over the decades it has developed to a social network held together by a common concept of aesthetics, self-representation, and individualism. The musical preferences of the dark scene are characterized by a mix of styles ranging from futurism, electropop, early music, (neo-) classical,and folk music to punk rock, rock, techno and ambient music.Common interests include music, art, and fashion as well as philosophy, new religious movements, or themes perceived by society as negative or taboo. Against backdrop of individualism, confrontation in particular with themes such as death, mortality, sadness, mourning, melancholy, psychology and psychopathology takes place.The scene is not to be understood as a musically or aesthetically closed and homogenous group. It is composed of many different currents, some of which may be diametrically opposed in their musical or fashion ideals. The lowest common denominator is the color black with all its associated symbolism. It is seen as an expression of seriousness, darkness and mysticism, but also of hopelessness and emptiness, melancholy, as well as its association with mourning and death. The dark scene is a community which defines itself through its internal symbols, the characteristic fashions of the different currents, as well as through its media and meeting places, especially events and dance clubs.".
- Dark_culture wikiPageID "4083681".
- Dark_culture wikiPageLength "3388".
- Dark_culture wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Dark_culture wikiPageRevisionID "696514156".
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Ambient_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Art.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Goth_subculture.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Musical_subcultures.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Subcultures.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Classical_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Danse_Macabre.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Dark_alternative_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Dark_wave.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Early_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Electro-industrial.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Electropop.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Fashion.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Folk_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Futurism.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink German_language.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Goth_subculture.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Independent_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassical_dark_wave.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Neofolk.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink New_religious_movement.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Portuguese_language.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Post-industrial_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Psychology.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Psychopathology.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Punk_rock.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Rock_music.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Social_environment.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Social_network.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_language.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Subculture.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Techno.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLink Umbrella_term.
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "Dark culture".
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "dark alternative scene".
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "dark culture".
- Dark_culture wikiPageWikiLinkText "dark wave".
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Culture-stub.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Disambiguation_needed.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expand_German.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Goth_subculture.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Gothic.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Music-stub.
- Dark_culture wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Dark_culture subject Category:Goth_subculture.
- Dark_culture subject Category:Musical_subcultures.
- Dark_culture subject Category:Subcultures.
- Dark_culture hypernym Term.
- Dark_culture type Genre.
- Dark_culture type Genre.
- Dark_culture type Redirect.
- Dark_culture comment "The term dark culture (German Schwarze Szene, Portuguese cultura obscura, Spanish escena oscura), also called dark alternative scene, is an umbrella term, used to describe a summary of parts of several subcultures. In this context the \"culture\" is not to be understood as closed subculture, but as social environment, a milieu, which comprises people with similar interests and preferences (e.g.".
- Dark_culture label "Dark culture".
- Dark_culture sameAs Q388645.
- Dark_culture sameAs Schwarze_Szene.
- Dark_culture sameAs תרבות_הדארק.
- Dark_culture sameAs Schwaarz_Zeen.
- Dark_culture sameAs Schwarze_Szene.
- Dark_culture sameAs m.0bh5zp.
- Dark_culture sameAs Тёмная_сцена.
- Dark_culture sameAs Q388645.
- Dark_culture wasDerivedFrom Dark_culture?oldid=696514156.
- Dark_culture isPrimaryTopicOf Dark_culture.