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Struggling with distinction: How and why people switch between cultural hierarchy and equality
Author(s) -
van den Haak Marcel,
Wilterdink Nico
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
european journal of cultural studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.835
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1460-3551
pISSN - 1367-5494
DOI - 10.1177/1367549419861632
Subject(s) - meritocracy , habitus , hierarchy , sociology , ambivalence , taste , social psychology , inequality , repertoire , object (grammar) , narrative , epistemology , indexicality , gender studies , aesthetics , psychology , cultural capital , social science , political science , linguistics , mathematical analysis , physics , philosophy , mathematics , neuroscience , acoustics , law
In research on cultural taste and distinction, inconsistent and ambivalent attitudes towards hierarchy versus equality have largely been ignored. This study shows, by means of in-depth interviews with 90 Dutch people on their own and others’ cultural tastes, that both a hierarchical and an egalitarian repertoire appear in people’s narratives, and that these repertoires are often used simultaneously. People still distinguish culturally from others, but not consistently and often reluctantly, as they morally object to high–low distinctions based on aesthetic evaluations at the same time. This article analyses both repertoires and explores when and how tensions between the two come forward. We interpret these tensions on the micro level of self-presentation and habitus, and on the macro level of changing structures of inequality and meritocratic ideas.

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