Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Social status and cultural consumption / edited by Tak Wing Chan
Published Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2010
Online access available from:
Cambridge Core    View Resource Record  

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xv, 273 pages) : illustrations
Contents Social status and cultural consumption / Tak Wing Chan and John H. Goldthorpe -- The social status scale: its construction and properties / Tak Wing Chan -- Social stratification and musical consumption: highbrow-middlebrow in the United States / Arthur S. Alderson, Isaac Heacock and Azamat Junisbai -- Bourdieu's legacy and the class-status debate on cultural consumption: musical consumption in contemporary France / Philippe Coulangeon and Yannick Lemel -- Social status and public cultural consumption: Chile in comparative perspective / Florencia Torche -- Social stratification and cultural participation in Hungary: a post-communist pattern of consumption? / Erzsébet Bukodi -- Status, class, and culture in the Netherlands / Gerbert Kraaykamp, Koen van Eijck and Wout Ultee -- Social stratification of cultural consumption across three domains: music; theatre, dance and cinema; and the visual arts / Tak Wing Chan and John H. Goldthorpe
Summary Leading scholars from around the world examine the social stratification of arts and culture in contemporary society
"How does cultural hierarchy relate to social hierarchy? Do the more advantaged consume 'high' culture, while the less advantaged consume popular culture? Or has cultural consumption in contemporary societies become individualised to such a degree that there is no longer any social basis for cultural consumption? Leading scholars from the UK, the USA, Chile, France, Hungary and the Netherlands systematically examine the social stratification of arts and culture. They evaluate the 'class--culture homology argument' of Pierre Bourdieu and Herbert Gans; the 'individualisation arguments' of Anthony Giddens, Ulrich Beck and Zygmunt Bauman; and the 'omnivore--univore argument' of Richard Peterson. They also demonstrate that, consistent with Max Weber's class--status distinction, cultural consumption, as a key element of lifestyle, is stratified primarily on the basis of social status rather than by social class."--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Consumption (Economics) -- Social aspects
Social status.
social status.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Cultural Policy.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Popular Culture.
Consumption (Economics) -- Social aspects
Social status
Culturele participatie.
Sociale ongelijkheid.
Sociale status.
Form Electronic book
Author Chan, Tak Wing
LC no. 2010001100
ISBN 9780511712753
0511712758
0511714831
9780511714832
9780511722899
0511722893
9780511712036
0511712030
9780521194464
0521194466
9781107406988
1107406986
1107204763
9781107204768
1283331365
9781283331364
0511713584
9780511713583
9786613331366
6613331368
0511716087
9780511716089