TY - JOUR
T1 - Are art-museum visitors different from other people? the relationship between attendance and social and political attitudes in the United States
AU - DiMaggio, Paul
N1 - Funding Information:
* E-mail: [email protected] I am grateful to Tim Dowd for undertaking the statistical analyses reported in this paper, and to Mich~le Lamont and Richard A. Peterson for helpful comments. Research support from Princeton University is thankfully acknowledged. I have benefitted from the thoughtful response of members of the Association of Art Museum Directors and of the members and staff of the Cleveland Museum of Art to oral presentation of some of these findings.
PY - 1996
Y1 - 1996
N2 - Most research on aesthetic taste and activities views familiarity with and participation in the arts as a type of cultural capital and emphasizes the relationship between taste and socioeconomic achievement. By contrast, this paper examines the manner in which arts participation is embedded in larger systems of meaning, by investigating the associations between one kind of artistic participation - art-museum visiting - and individuals' responses to ninety-four questions about their social, cultural, and political values and attitudes. Using multiple classification analysis, we identified numerous significant differences between U.S. art-museum visitors and other Americans, after adjusting for the effects of age, education, income, race, and gender. Art-museum visitors are somewhat more secular, trusting, politically liberal, racially tolerant, and open to other cultures and lifestyles, and much more tolerant and interested in high culture than are comparable non-visitors. These differences represent a distinctly modern disposition, evincing, first, a faith in progress and in scientific (and artistic) authority; and, second, an open, cosmopolitan orientation to both people and cultures. Affinities and tensions between this broader set of orientations and the strategic uses of cultural capital are addressed speculatively.
AB - Most research on aesthetic taste and activities views familiarity with and participation in the arts as a type of cultural capital and emphasizes the relationship between taste and socioeconomic achievement. By contrast, this paper examines the manner in which arts participation is embedded in larger systems of meaning, by investigating the associations between one kind of artistic participation - art-museum visiting - and individuals' responses to ninety-four questions about their social, cultural, and political values and attitudes. Using multiple classification analysis, we identified numerous significant differences between U.S. art-museum visitors and other Americans, after adjusting for the effects of age, education, income, race, and gender. Art-museum visitors are somewhat more secular, trusting, politically liberal, racially tolerant, and open to other cultures and lifestyles, and much more tolerant and interested in high culture than are comparable non-visitors. These differences represent a distinctly modern disposition, evincing, first, a faith in progress and in scientific (and artistic) authority; and, second, an open, cosmopolitan orientation to both people and cultures. Affinities and tensions between this broader set of orientations and the strategic uses of cultural capital are addressed speculatively.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0304-422X(96)00008-3
DO - 10.1016/S0304-422X(96)00008-3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:1842829863
SN - 0304-422X
VL - 24
SP - 161
EP - 180
JO - Poetics
JF - Poetics
IS - 2-4
ER -