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Cultural Capital, Social Inequalities and Cultural Policy

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Title: Cultural Capital, Social Inequalities and Cultural Policy


1
Cultural Capital, Social Inequalities and
Cultural Policy
www.cresc.ac.uk
  • Tony Bennett
  • Open University
  • Sociology and CRESC

2
Cultural Capital and Social Exclusion
  • Tony Bennett (Open University)
  • Mike Savage (University of Manchester)
  • Elizabeth Silva (Open University)
  • Alan Warde (University of Manchester)
  • Modesto Gayo-Cal (University of Manchester)
  • David Wright (Open University)
  • With the collaboration of Brigitte Le Roux and
    Henry Rouanet (U of Paris V)

3
Components of the study
  • 25 focus group discussions
  • National random survey (1564 main sample and
    ethnic boost sample of 227 Indian, Pakistani
    Afro-Caribbean)
  • 44 household interviews with selected survey
    respondents and their partners
  • 11 elite interviewers

4
Contents of the questionnaire
  • Cultural domains of taste
  • Television
  • Films
  • Reading
  • Music
  • Visual Art
  • Sport
  • Eating out
  • Activities
  • General recreation and leisure
  • Collections and possessions
  • Learning skills and accomplishments
  • Appearance and embodiment

5
Types of cultural capital (1)
  • The first, following Bourdieu, might loosely be
    described as that of the Kantian aesthetic in
    which the ability to appreciate abstract
    cultural forms, distanced from the practical
    necessity of daily life, is viewed as a crucial
    component of cultural capital. This is most
    likely to manifest itself in relation to
    traditional forms of high culture (a liking for
    classical music and opera, for example) and,
    perhaps more especially, in modernist and
    avant-garde cultural practices.
  • Cultural capital is defined in terms of whatever
    is consecrated by the education system and is
    thus able to be mobilized by, in the main, the
    professional and managerial middle classes as a
    key aspect of trans-generational strategies of
    inheritance.
  • The cultural omnivore thesis defines cultural
    capital less in terms of a particular orientation
    to particular types of culture than in terms of a
    socially restricted ability, again largely
    acquired and transmitted through the education
    system, to range across different cultural genres
    irrespective of their classification as high or
    low.

6
Types of cultural capital (2)
  • 4. The concept of cultural capital as a
    distinctively national formation which, in the
    terms proposed by Ghassan Hage, operates in the
    different relations that different ethnic groups
    have to those forms of cultural experience,
    knowledge and familiarity which confer a sense of
    national belongingness.
  • 5. Subcultural capital, finally, refers to those
    assets that have a limited circulation among
    members of specific subcultures which might be
    defined in terms of specific age groups or as the
    forms of cultural know how and famililarity that
    are specific to particular ethnic communities

7
Cultural map axis 1 - participation
8
Cultural map axis 1 and class
9
Elite interviews senior executive
  • Interviewer Do you support any organisation?
  • Eleanor Oh yes. I support, Im a patron of the
    Tate and Im a patron
  • of the Royal Academy.
  • Interviewer Tate Britain or Tate Modern?
  • Eleanor Well no, its the Tate, you know and so
    its both if I could
  • put it that way. And then the Royal Academy.
    And I, through a friend, a
  • good friend, Im a trustee, Im a trustee of a
    trust connected with the
  • Royal college of Music but again I think thats a
    combination of
  • friendship and business. But all of those you
    know theyre supporting
  • the Arts in one way or another arent they.
  • Interviewer They do yes and how was it that you
    get into the Royal College of
  • Music?
  • Eleanor As I say because the Director of the
    Royal College is a friend
  • of mine. And she said would I sit on, they were
    looking for a new
  • trustee for one of their charitable trusts and
    she said would you sit on
  • it and I said yes I would. But the other two are
    just because I applied,
  • as one can, and as long as youre prepared to pay
    the fee, theyre only
  • too pleased to take your money, putting it very
    bluntly! Thats alright.

10
Unskilled and semi-skilled workers
  • Bif Well, youve said that some arts council is
    interested in our
  • opinions?
  • Moderator Yes, and they want your opinions.
  • Spud No disrespect to these people but I still
    reckon that theyre
  • not looking at the whole picture, right?
  • Bif I really dont think that people are
    interested in art and what
  • the gallerys are doing.
  • Tom Theres probably about 25 of people who
    worry about it. So 75 of
  • people are more worried about whats going to
    happen with our kids coming
  • though life and that.
  • Bif Yeah. Im telling you something now. Id
    love us to be in a
  • situation where education wasnt a problem, we
    wouldnt have the Health
  • Authority as a problem, we wouldnt be moaning at
    the council because
  • weve got housing difficulties. And then for them
    to suggest that weve
  • got a problem with not going to galleries and
    theatres. They need to get
  • real.

11
Cultural map axis 2 contemporary and traditional
12
Cultural map axis 2 Age
13
English scale
  • Television items Spooks, Midsomer Murders, Bad
    Girls, Absolutely Fabulously, University
    Challenge, Panorama, A Touch of Frost, Two Pints
    of Lager and a Packet of Crisps, East Enders, The
    Bill, Coronation Street, The Grand National,
    Election Night, Queens Xmas Broadcast
  • Literary items J.K.Rowling, Harry Potter and the
    Chamber of Secrets Jane Austen, Pride and
    Prejudice Catherine Cookson, The Solace of Sin
  • Musical items Oasis, Wonderwall
  • Visual art items L.S.Lowry, J.M.W. Turner, Tracy
    Emin,

14
American Scale
  • Television items South Park, Sex and the City,
    The Simpsons, Friends, Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
    West Wing, Six Feet Under,
  • Cinema items Alfred Hitchcock, Stephen Spielberg
  • Literary items John Grisham, The Firm Maya
    Angelou, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
  • Musical items Eminem, Stan Philip Glass,
    Einstein on the Beach Miles Davis, Kind of Blue
    Britney Spears, Oops I Did It Again Frank
    Sinatra, Chicago
  • Visual art items Andy Warhol.

15
European scale
  • Cinema items Pedro Almodovar, Ingmar Bergman
  • Literary items Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary
  • Musical items Vivaldi, Four Seasons Mahler,
    Symphony No 5
  • Visual art items Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso

16
Ethnicity and the regional scales, number of
items known and liked
17
Country of origin and the regional scales
18
Age and the regional scales, number of items
known and liked
19
Bourdieu policy priorities
  • Indeed, we can also question the real function of
    the policy that consists in encouraging and
    supporting marginal and largely inefficient
    bodies as long as everything possible has not
    been implemented that might force and authorize
    the academic institution to fulfil the function
    incumbent on it both de facto and de jure, which
    is to develop in all members of society, without
    distinction, an aptitude for those cultural
    practices considered by society as most noble.
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