Authors
Massimo Airoldi
Publication date
2017
Journal
PhD dissertation
Description
This work explores the social uses and social roots of musical taste in contemporary Italy. For the first time, large amounts of online data, retrieved from digital platform YouTube, have been exploited for this purpose, in the broader context of a mixed-method research design. Following an inductive methodological approach, the present study shows that shared notions of “good” and “bad” musical taste–broader and more flexible than what the traditional highbrow/lowbrow dichotomy implied–have manifest social consequences as well as tacit social determinants. Notwithstanding the academically successful claims of a widespread de-hierarchization, democratization and hyper-individualization of postmodern culture, this unconventional empirical investigation sheds light on how distinction works in the digital age. Pierre Bourdieu famously investigated the social roots and uses of cultural taste in 1960s France. In La Distinction, artistic preferences and forms of aesthetic appreciation were portrayed as both the product of class-based socialization and the producers of “distinctions”–classificatory practices drawing symbolic boundaries between forms of art and social strata. The present work attempts to replicate Bourdieu’s path-breaking analysis, moving from the following methodological premise: since cultural tastes and evaluations are now objectified in the form of researchable digital data, distinctions can be studied on online platforms in an unobtrusive, relational and ground-up way. An overview of my research design is illustrated in Chapter 2. Chapter 1 critically reviews Bourdieu and followers’ contributions to the sociological study of cultural …
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