Are musical tastes still strongly and universally correlated with social class, as asserted by Pierre Bourdieu in a suggestive formulation (Bourdieu, 1984, p. 158) . A lot of evidences, based on the sociological literature on tastes and cultural consumption, support the robustness of this correlation, while less straightforwardly defined than stated by Bourdieu. Indeed, this correlation appears to be slightly defined as a correspondence between social stratification and cultural legitimacy scale (i.e. highbrow arts and culture for the upper middle classes vs. lowbrow arts and culture for the lower classes. see Gans, 1974; Levine, 1988), and it tends to be more adequately described as a matter of scope of tastes and cultural habits, as state...
Although we found a general trend favouring the omnivorousness thesis, as soon as we adjusted it to ...
This article explores the consequences of social mobility for musical tastes. It first shows that th...
This article attempts to move the discussion about the cultural omnivore ahead in two ways. Firstly,...
Are musical tastes still strongly and universally correlated with social class, as asserted by Pierr...
Are musical tastes still strongly and universally correlated with social class, as asserted by Pierr...
The question addressed by this article concerns the extent to which the extensive eclecticism observ...
In this article, we investigate patterns of musical taste using a large sample from the Dutch popula...
In this article we use recent survey data to test three arguments on the relationship between social...
© 2016, Sociological Research Online. All rights reserved. This research offers a unique opportunity...
In this article, the category of omnivorousness is taken up as a new model of cultural consumption, ...
This mixed-methods study examines college students’ music preferences in order to better understand ...
This research offers a unique opportunity to revisit the omnivore hypothesis under a unified method ...
Contains fulltext : 77346_aut.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access) ...
The ‘omnivore’ hypothesis currently dominates the academic literature on the social patterning of ta...
A large part of current research in cultural sociology highlights the so-called 'omnivorous' paradig...
Although we found a general trend favouring the omnivorousness thesis, as soon as we adjusted it to ...
This article explores the consequences of social mobility for musical tastes. It first shows that th...
This article attempts to move the discussion about the cultural omnivore ahead in two ways. Firstly,...
Are musical tastes still strongly and universally correlated with social class, as asserted by Pierr...
Are musical tastes still strongly and universally correlated with social class, as asserted by Pierr...
The question addressed by this article concerns the extent to which the extensive eclecticism observ...
In this article, we investigate patterns of musical taste using a large sample from the Dutch popula...
In this article we use recent survey data to test three arguments on the relationship between social...
© 2016, Sociological Research Online. All rights reserved. This research offers a unique opportunity...
In this article, the category of omnivorousness is taken up as a new model of cultural consumption, ...
This mixed-methods study examines college students’ music preferences in order to better understand ...
This research offers a unique opportunity to revisit the omnivore hypothesis under a unified method ...
Contains fulltext : 77346_aut.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access) ...
The ‘omnivore’ hypothesis currently dominates the academic literature on the social patterning of ta...
A large part of current research in cultural sociology highlights the so-called 'omnivorous' paradig...
Although we found a general trend favouring the omnivorousness thesis, as soon as we adjusted it to ...
This article explores the consequences of social mobility for musical tastes. It first shows that th...
This article attempts to move the discussion about the cultural omnivore ahead in two ways. Firstly,...