The Global Omnivore: Identifying Musical Taste Groups in Austria, England, Israel and Serbia
Author(s) -
Leguina Adrian,
Widdop Paul,
Tampubolon Gindo
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
sociological research online
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.593
H-Index - 49
ISSN - 1360-7804
DOI - 10.5153/sro.4020
Subject(s) - cross cultural , taste , sociology , politics , scope (computer science) , openness to experience , ethnocentrism , omnivore , phenomenon , social psychology , psychology , social science , epistemology , anthropology , political science , biology , ecology , philosophy , neuroscience , computer science , law , predation , programming language
This research offers a unique opportunity to revisit the omnivore hypothesis under a unified method of cross-national analysis. To accomplish this, we interpret omnivourism as a special case of cultural eclecticism ( Ollivier, 2008 ; Ollivier, Gauthier and Truong, 2009 ). Our methodological approach incorporates the simultaneous analysis of locally produced and globally known musical genres. Its objective is to verify whether cultural omnivourism is a widespread phenomenon, and to determine to what extent any conclusions can be generalised across countries with different social structures and different levels of cultural openness. To truly understand the scope of the omnivourism hypothesis, we argue that it is essential to perform a cross-national comparison to test the hypothesis within a range of social, political and cultural contexts, and a reflection of different historical and cultural repertoires ( Lamont, 1992 ).
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