Abstract
Are higher status cultural tastes in the modern United States better described as being inclusive and broad or exclusive and narrow? We construct an original dataset in response to conflicting answers to this question. We fill a major gap in the literature on cultural tastes by simultaneously considering taste for both musical genres and artists within genres. By examining the compositional balance of respondents’ taste portfolios, we reconcile seemingly incommensurate theoretical frameworks of class homology and omnivorousness. The results indicate that an omnivorous disposition to music is a relatively middle-status position in the social structure. In contrast, positions characterized by higher levels of cultural capital map onto exclusive and narrower tastes for consecrated culture.
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Nault, J. F., Baumann, S., Childress, C., & Rawlings, C. M. (2021). The social positions of taste between and within music genres: From omnivore to snob. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 24(3), 717–740. https://doi.org/10.1177/13675494211006090
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