2014-01-04
Social mobility and cultural dissonance
Publication
Publication
Poetics : Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts , Volume 42 - Issue 1 p. 82- 97
Cultural omnivorousness has been associated with the cultural tolerance or cosmopolitanism of the upper social strata. Building on a large-scale survey in Flanders (Belgium) (n=2849), we find that dissonant taste profiles—i.e., the combination of musical genres from different brow-levels, of which omnivorousness is one manifestation—are not only characteristic of the social elites. These profiles are also present in lower social strata and are partly the result of social mobility: Both upwardly, as well as downwardly, socially mobile individuals include cultural activities characteristic of the social position of origin and destination in their cultural profiles. We argue that the omnipresence of this ‘‘cultural dissonance’’ questions the idea that tolerance and cosmopolitanism are exclusive characteristics of higher social strata and that boundary-crossing per se functions as a status-marker.
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| doi.org/10.1016/j.poetic.2013.11.002, hdl.handle.net/1765/98133 | |
| Poetics : Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts | |
| Organisation | Ghent University-Universiteit Gent |
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Daenekindt, S., & Roose, H. (2014). Social mobility and cultural dissonance. Poetics : Journal of Empirical Research on Culture, the Media and the Arts, 42(1), 82–97. doi:10.1016/j.poetic.2013.11.002 |
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