Abstract: Trends in arts and culture tend to be longer-lasting and less fragile than in other fields such as clothing design. Most herding models are not able to explain such stability, instead predicting informational cascades to be fragile and fads to be frequent. The present contribution is able to explain the hysterisis of trends in arts by incorporating the accumulation of consumption capital into a herding model. Further, the model is tested empirically by analyzing measures of relative and absolute concentration in the television business. It is concluded that by being exposed to art and culture people accumulate consumption capital for a particular style or artist and that this mechanism tends to make herding in arts stable over tim...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium model in which consumers have status preference. I...
International audienceThis edited collection offers an in-depth analysis of the complex and changing...
Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine Abstract This essay addresses the mercantile rela...
Trends in arts and culture tend to be longer-lasting and less fragile than in other fields such as c...
In this paper we develop a theoretical model that investigates the demand for cultural goods under t...
We study the determinants of the demand of cultural goods using two different approaches. Starting b...
This paper discusses the extent to which socio-demographic characteristics of consumers and their pa...
Cultural capital is assumed to benefit all members of society. It is built up by the aggregate consu...
Demand for arts and endogenous tastes In this article, the influence of habit formation on the deman...
It is impossible for the public and the cultural product to meet unless the role of culture in socie...
Cultural capital, is the nations’ unwritten properties that make up their cultures, civilizations an...
In contrast to the amount of research dealing with the causes and consequences of receptive highbrow...
The author discusses typology distinguishing highbrow/distinctive and cognitive type of cultural cap...
Where does the concept of cultural capital stand regarding the histories of its creation, uses, deba...
Cultural capital is usually defined as set of social features that provide individuals with social m...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium model in which consumers have status preference. I...
International audienceThis edited collection offers an in-depth analysis of the complex and changing...
Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine Abstract This essay addresses the mercantile rela...
Trends in arts and culture tend to be longer-lasting and less fragile than in other fields such as c...
In this paper we develop a theoretical model that investigates the demand for cultural goods under t...
We study the determinants of the demand of cultural goods using two different approaches. Starting b...
This paper discusses the extent to which socio-demographic characteristics of consumers and their pa...
Cultural capital is assumed to benefit all members of society. It is built up by the aggregate consu...
Demand for arts and endogenous tastes In this article, the influence of habit formation on the deman...
It is impossible for the public and the cultural product to meet unless the role of culture in socie...
Cultural capital, is the nations’ unwritten properties that make up their cultures, civilizations an...
In contrast to the amount of research dealing with the causes and consequences of receptive highbrow...
The author discusses typology distinguishing highbrow/distinctive and cognitive type of cultural cap...
Where does the concept of cultural capital stand regarding the histories of its creation, uses, deba...
Cultural capital is usually defined as set of social features that provide individuals with social m...
This paper presents a dynamic general equilibrium model in which consumers have status preference. I...
International audienceThis edited collection offers an in-depth analysis of the complex and changing...
Art Style | Art & Culture International Magazine Abstract This essay addresses the mercantile rela...