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   系統號碼917722
   書刊名Cultural participation [electronic resource] : the perpetuation of middle-class privilege in Dublin, Ireland /
   主要著者McCall Magan, Kerry.
   其他著者SpringerLink (Online service);臺灣學術電子書聯盟 (TAEBC)
   出版項Cham : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022.
   索書號NX180.S6
   ISBN9783031187551
   標題Arts and society-Ireland-Dublin-History.
Arts-Ireland-Dublin-Citizen participation-History.
   電子資源https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-18755-1
   叢書名Palgrave studies in cultural participation,2661-8702;Palgrave studies in cultural participation.2661-8702
   
    
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內容簡介This book provides a nuanced account of cultural competence, knowledge and skills illustrated in distinctive taste in the middle and upper classes in Dublin, Ireland (Bourdieu, 1984, 1986) It highlights how the development of cultural taste at a young age is linked to cultural participation in later life. Inspired by work that captures the textured social cartography of distinctive cultural taste (Bennett, Emmison & Frow, 1999; Bennett, Savage, Silva, Warde, Gayo-Cal & Wright, 2009), this research charts the changing nature of cultural participation in Dublin, Ireland and shows how cultural consumption has broadened from the narrow range of traditional high art forms towards one which grazes across the general register of culture. As elsewhere, this omnivorous, broad and pluralistic cultural palette has not altered patterns of distinction in cultural participation, rather it belies an emerging cultural capital profile - one where art form boundaries have collapsed but social boundaries and cultural distinction remains intact. Through interviews with two age cohorts (18-24yrs) and (45-54yrs) in Dublin in 2019, this research shows how the dominant class, through histories of cultural exposure have developed cultural taste and competence that is remarkably enduring. Reviewing available data on arts attendance and cultural participation in Ireland today, this text highlights how years of cultural familiarity allow individuals to exert a cultural dominance that facilitates class to be performed obliquely. It also demonstrates how existing surveys reinforce traditional ways of seeing with 'art' considered highbrow, formal and valued while culture is domestic, informal and less valued in the eyes of polity. This view informs Irish arts strategy and policy, ultimately reinforcing that 'ways of seeing' and policy perspectives, do matter (Berger, 1972) Kerry McCall Magan is Country Director for the British Council in Ireland. In this role, Kerry is engaged in strategic cultur

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