Theme vs Cyberpop - What's the difference?
theme | cyberpop |
A subject of a talk or an artistic piece; a topic.
A recurring idea; a motif.
(music) The main melody of a piece of music, especially one that is the source of variations.
(film, television) A song, or a snippet of a song, that identifies a film, a TV program, a character, etc. by playing at the appropriate time.
(computing, figuratively) The collection of color schemes, sounds, artwork etc., that "skin" an environment towards a particular motif.
(grammar) The stem of a word
(linguistics) thematic relation of a noun phrase to a verb
(linguistics) Theta role in generative grammar and government and binding theory.
(linguistics) Topic, what is generally being talked about, as opposed to rheme
A regional unit of organisation in the Byzantine empire.
(computing) To apply a theme to; to change the visual appearance and/or layout of (software).
(rare) Pop music]] [[evoke, evoking cyber themes.
* 1997 , Mark Dery, Escape Velocity
* 1998 , Bradd Shore, Culture in Mind: Cognition, Culture, and the Problem of Meaning
* 2004 , Pascal Bussy, Mick Fish, Kraftwerk: man, machine and music
Elements of cyberpunk fiction and cyberculture brought into the mainstream as pop culture.
As nouns the difference between theme and cyberpop
is that theme is theme, topic while cyberpop is (rare) pop music]] [[evoke|evoking cyber themes.theme
English
Noun
(en noun)Verb
(them)cyberpop
English
Noun
(-)- ...cyberpop duo the Shamen fashion an archaic futurism from rapped vocals, fizzing synthesizers, hyperactive drum machine...
- In his carefully orchestrated fusion of innocence and menace, Michael Jackson has become a kind of cultural icon of techno-totemism, a true cyberpop villain/hero.
- More than ever they are seen as the originators of modern electronic pop music — somehow the bridge between Stockhausen and cyberpop .
