Abstract
Analyses of cultural artifacts may be systematically vulnerable to misattributions, in two converse forms: either 1) due to attributing relevance to irrelevant features, or 2) due to attributing irrelevance to relevant features. These misattributions are caused by two formal features of cultural artifacts, skeuomorphs, features inherited from a broader class, and shibboleths, features distinguishing a narrower class. Because skeuomorphs and shibboleths do not distinguish themselves as such, their interpretation as such is dependent upon the discernment of the observer, and thus are easily misattributed. These misattributions have several culturally important effects, including aesthetic disagreements and political divergences, as well
as a generalized condition of interpretive indeterminacy. Several solutions to these uncertainties are available, including default interpretive doubts, reasonable interpretive ranges, and scientific interpretive methods, though all of these solutions have tradeoffs. These considerations have special importance for the analysis of popular culture, where these features intersect in a manner that is both especially uncertain and especially impactful.