‘But is it good?’ Why Aesthetic Values Matter in Sociological Accounts of Tastes

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Laurie Hanquinet

Abstract

If the relation between social position, cultural capital and tastes is well known in the literature, many accounts of tastes do not bother to examine the aesthetic dimension of the cultural capital. Yet, people are immersed during their lives within a multiplicity of aesthetic values that are processed into aesthetic dispositions that orient their cultural choices. This article develops a theoretical model for taste-making that helps us examine the implications of why aesthetic values should be taken seriously. First these values are historically situated and hence are bound to change over time. This means that the definitions of our conceptual tools, such cultural capital and highbrow culture, need to be monitored and updated when necessary. Although they are rooted in social transformations, these values acquire a force of their own and motivate people’s cultural preferences. This matters since these values also participate in the delimitation of what is perceived as good, bad, right and wrong in society. In short, I argue that tastes are influenced by people’s social position but in a much more indirect way than has often been assumed.

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How to Cite
Hanquinet, L. (2018). ‘But is it good?’ Why Aesthetic Values Matter in Sociological Accounts of Tastes. Journal of Cultural Analysis and Social Change, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.20897/jcasc/3990
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