Culture, Class and Social Exclusion

Similar documents
Locating the Contemporary History of Everyday Participation

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education. Published

You will be notified two hours after your session whether you will be required for Round 2.

Everyday life. In Unit 4, you learn how to... Before you begin...

Institutes of Technology: Frequently Asked Questions

Bibliometrics and the Research Excellence Framework (REF)

Ac#ve Ageing: from the perspec,ve of a sample of older people

TROUBLING QUALITATIVE INQUIRY: ACCOUNTS AS DATA, AND AS PRODUCTS

CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION

Spatial Formations. Installation Art between Image and Stage.

The social and cultural purposes of television today.

1 Social status and cultural

Disputing about taste: Practices and perceptions of cultural hierarchy in the Netherlands van den Haak, M.A.

The following is a selection of monologues we suggest you use for the 2016 Performance Lab Auditions.

London Environment Directors Network

Punctuating Personality 1.15

Scene 1: The Street.

Chris: Yeah, I wasn t able to go up a flight of stairs, wasn t able to lay down flat and wasn t able to breathe.

BDD-A Universitatea din București Provided by Diacronia.ro for IP ( :46:58 UTC)

Making Hard Choices: Using Data to Make Collections Decisions

HAUNTED MASKED SERIAL KILLER. Written by. D. R. Whiteley

ESRC Identities and Social Action Programme Launch. Professor Beverley Skeggs (Sociology, Goldsmiths College, London) April 2005

Healthy Heritage: MK Underground

THEATRE DIRECTOR, Beck Theatre

Arrangements for: National Certificate in Music. at SCQF level 5. Group Award Code: GF8A 45. Validation date: June 2012

Arts and Dementia. Using Participatory Music Making to Improve Acute Dementia Care Hospital Environments: An Exploratory Study

6. Embodiment, sexuality and ageing

I ve got a story for every occasion : Sense-making and Sense-giving in Organizational Life

APSA Methods Studio Workshop: Textual Analysis and Critical Semiotics. August 31, 2016 Matt Guardino Providence College

Viewing practices in relation to contemporary television serial end credit

Муниципальный тур Всероссийской олимпиады учебный год Английский язык 7-8 классы. LISTENING Time: 15 min CONVERSATION

The Working-Class Experience in Contemporary Australian Poetry

Music on Sea. Hub Offer 2017/18. Every child a musician.

Activate! B1+ Extra Grammar Tests Test 10

AUDITION INFORMATION FOR THE 2010 FALL PLAY: From Up Here By Liz Flahive

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS ADVERTISING RATES & INFORMATION

Meet Roberto Lugo, the ceramicist changing the politics of clay

Classification of Media Users Watching Movies Through Various Devices

Like A Rolling Stone

4 th CLMV Regional Conference

Professional Writing in Social Work Practice

Written evidence submitted by the British Film Institute (BFI)

Preliminary English Test for Schools

Review: Rhetoric. Pseudoreasoning lead us to fallacies. Fallacies: Mistakes in reasoning.

Assistant Director FUTURE BODIES Application Pack. GMAC is funded by

THE WORK OF ART: exploring art as a social practice. helma sawatzky

1 Unit friendship TEST. Vocabulary. 6. A:... is the party going to start? B: At three.

Imagining. 2. Choose endings: Next, students must drag and drop the correct endings into each square.

juice Daghdha Mentoring Programme Focus: Exploiting Ethnicity? essexdance: PRO:fessional technology labs oh!art Autumn season for artist development

Dressing Room Q and A with Doctor s star Lorna Laidlaw aka Mrs Tembe

EXPRESSIONS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATE

The Wrong House to Burgle. By Glenn McGoldrick

Teacher s Pack. Face 2 Face CREATION

The majority of schools taking part in the workshops were from special needs schools, with learning difficulties or behavioural needs.

STYLE. Sample Test. School Tests for Young Learners of English. Form A. Level 1

European Agenda for Music: AEC, EAS and EMU members Feedback Joint Overview

STRAND ALDWYCH PROPOSALS

Critical interpretive synthesis: what it is and why it is needed. Mary Dixon-Woods Department of Health Sciences University of Leicester

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

Time out. Module. Discuss: What do you usually do in your free time? What kind of music/films do you like? What s in this module?

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

Introduction: Mills today

Consumer Choice Bias Due to Number Symmetry: Evidence from Real Estate Prices. AUTHOR(S): John Dobson, Larry Gorman, and Melissa Diane Moore

The Netherlands Institute for Social Research (2016), Sport and Culture patterns in interest and participation

Name / Title of intervention. 1. Abstract

Guidelines for the 2014 SS-AAEA Undergraduate Paper Competition and the SS-AAEA Journal of Agricultural Economics

On the weekend UNIT. In this unit. 1 Listen and read.

ARCHITECTURE AT EYE-LEVEL: TELEVISION AS MEDIA

Cara: Most people would say it s about playing but I don t think it s about playing, I think it s about making friends and having good fun.

Cut Out Of The Picture

Post of THEATRE DIRECTOR, Swindon Theatres

Research Playing the impact game how to improve your visibility. Helmien van den Berg Economic and Management Sciences Library 7 th May 2013

Level A2 LAAS ENGLISH LANGUAGE EXAMINATIONS DECEMBER Certificate Recognised by ICC NAME... LANGUAGE ATTAINMENT ASSESSMENT SYSTEM INSTRUCTIONS

SSI: Contemporary Music Industry. June 2016 Dr Susan Nelle

LEVEL PRE-A1 LAAS LANGUAGE ATTAINMENT ASSESSMENT SYSTEM. English English Language Language Examinations Examinations. December 2005 May 2012

Startle Response. Joyce Ma and Debbie Kim. September 2005

1 Family matters. Vocabulary. Ages and stages of life. The family

KEY ENGLISH TEST for Schools

These are some notes to give you some idea of the content of the lecture they are not exhaustive, nor always accurate! So read the referenced work.

Update on the National Library of Brunei Darussalam

MEASUREMENT OF TV IN NZ

I Wish I Had... Preparatory Reading TALK ABOUT REGRETS, UNREAL PAST CONDITIONAL, EXPRESSING REGRETS

Rubric: Cambridge English, Preliminary English Test for Schools - Listening.

INSTITUTO NACIONAL 8 TH GRADE UNITS UNIT 6 COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS

NORTHERN BALLET MUSIC DIRECTOR

This is the published version of a chapter published in Thinking with Beverley Skeggs.

Movimento de Expressão Fotográfica

SOCI 101. Introduction to Sociology. sociology.morrisville.edu. Professor Kurt Reymers, Ph.D.

Cultural Heritage Theory and Practice: raising awareness to a problem facing our generation

ANTHRO Research Design and Ethnographic Methods

Discourse analysis is an umbrella term for a range of methodological approaches that

Community Music Therapy & Performance in Adolescent Mental Health

LISTENING ANSWER KEY. Candidate Number: Task Three: Radio Programme Task One: Short Conversations 1-6. Task Two: Making Notes 7-15

U.S.-China Innovation Survey of Expert Opinion IC Design 2013 May-June Topline Results

Scopus. Advanced research tips and tricks. Massimiliano Bearzot Customer Consultant Elsevier

Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Idle talk or rumor, especially about the personal or private affairs of others.*

social and cultural capital in the

CASE STUDY: MELBOURNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

KEY DIFFERENTIATORS MUSIC AS SOCIAL-LEARNING THE UNIFYING PURPOSE INTENSIVE SOCIAL ACTION PROGRAM - AFTER-HOURS

Transcription:

Culture, Class and Social Exclusion Andrew Miles ESRC Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change (CRESC) University of Manchester andrew.miles@manchester.ac.uk

Cultural Capital and Social Distinction CRESC new cultural sociology. Influence of Pierre Bourdieu. Cultural tastes and practices central to understandings of power and social division rather than a by-product of economic relations (Bourdieu 1984) Cultural Capital and Social Exclusion Survey, Culture, Class, Distinction (Bennett et al 2009) Main distinction between the (multiply) engaged and the disengaged. High cultural capital associated with omnivourousness (Peterson and Kern 1996). But of several types Social class remains important but age more so

Investigating disengagement The deficit model of participation in cultural policy Underlying social inclusion agenda of late 90s and early noughties, non participants as a social problem DCMS and its NDPBs cast in the role of cultural engineers. We will argue that being involved with the arts can have a lasting and transforming effect on many people s lives. This is true not just for individuals, but also for neighbourhoods, communities and entire generations, whose sense of identity and purpose can be changed through art. Arts Council England, Ambition for the Arts, 2003 A polarizing, classifying narrative - inclusion as exclusion. Marking and marginalising practices (and people) as culturally valueless. Reinforcing middle-class norms. Methodological techniques for robust evidence of impacts which confirm a limited view of participation and participants

Everyday participation & ordinary culture Non-users of cultural institution often involved in vibrant informal cultural networks defined by ostensibly mundane pursuits and social relationships Right. Monday go for a mooch into Altrincham a bit of browsing, think of what I m going to buy on Thursday...Do window shopping first, and then pick my daughter up from nursery, go to the local park, bring her back and watch the telly, do her tea, bed, watch the telly And Thursdays, when I get my money [laughs], love it, go to Tesco do my food shopping, and I go into Altrincham and think, ooh, what shall I--, what shall I treat myself to this week. I normally go in to every single clothes shop, and then start out at the end and work my way up and then go back to the end again and think I ll have that one Saturdays, it depends on what my daughter wants to do, park or swimming or whatever Sundays maybe go up and see my mum and dad. I love going food shopping. I love it. I d love to go into Tescos and think right I haven t got a budget, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom...i love going round and thinking, you know--, cause I watch Gordon Ramsey, I think ooh what can--, what can I make tonight, you know. I think ooh, ooh I ll have that, I ll have that and I love doing all weird concoctions. Female, 20s, part-time cleaner, South Manchester

Ghostly participation Also reveal real cultural participants but under the survey radar because they don t self-identify as such - personal, privatised engagements, divorced from mainstream institutional contexts I ve always done art as a hobby because I never wanted to let go. I ve always been--, haven t been able to express my feelings a lot, so I ve always done a lot of it in art Female, 30s, part-time supermarket worker The things that I probably enjoy most in a week is probably seeing my girlfriend, going out to town and I get well into my painting as well, I paint a lot I forgot to mention that I do it three times a week to be honest I wouldn t really go out of my way to go to museums but if I m with my girlfriend and we ve got time to kill then we ll go in and have a look around and like just like be amazed at how some thing s can be perceived as art. Male, 20s, City Centre I just like started painting [Q. Why did you choose watercolour?] Because it s cheaper than oils. Also, it was on telly once, I was watching We ve got Sky now [Q. You said you ve been to the Lowry, what did you see at the Lowry?] There was some artist on, we didn t go specially for that--, Catherine, my daughter, was there doing a thing for school and there was an exhibition on for some artists so I went around and took a look at them. Couldn t tell you who it was Male,50s, former industrial worker

Detachment and Dis-identification Formal culture (A) irrelevant. Part of an alien way of life. Not excluded - vibrant vernacular culture. No resentment and no interest (Bennett et al 2009) Formal culture is (B) relevant. Interest but distanced from/alienated by the sites and resources of the arts establishment Much sector based thinking on barriers on participation focuses on individual level, psychological factors (e.g. Keaney 2008) Lacking developed understanding of the structural, spatial, biographical and relational socio-cultural contexts shaping behaviours

5-year interdisciplinary research project funded by the AHRC within its communities and creative economy programme Focus on meanings, stakes and consequences of everyday participation Participation as situated through a placebased studies of 6 contrasting cultural ecosystems Based on a range of primarily qualitative methods Informed re-use of existing quantitative data, new histories of participation and policy and local mapping work Experimental application projects Study of the relations of different practice communities to inform future research and policy development Four universities and 17 sector partners Understanding everyday participation articulating cultural values

Does detachment matter? No sense of exclusion and recruitment. Cultural institutions appreciated for their existence value Health and well-being associated with participation in general rather than a particular set of cultural practices (Miles and Sullivan 2010) BUT: socio-economic advantage and life chances remain strongly correlated with high levels of cultural capital

Arts in the community Dance United s Academy Project. Sentenced to Dance 50% less likely to offend than their peers; measurable increases capacity to learn ; 100% higher than expected rates of transfer into ETE Art form - mental discipline through bodily control Arts environment performance pressure, professional standards Social cooperation, group identity Cultural middle class dance company BUT: the contingency of progress and the problem of the intervention

Conclusions From cultural to social policy Issues of socialisation and distinction are fundamentally structural Require inter/transgenerational attention Educational and employment reform Democratise culture Recognise popular cultural forms and their value Connect policy and practice with the everyday Rationalise the funding of elite arts Promote omnivorousness

Exploring the class habitus of non users: detachment and dis-identification from legitimate culture Q: Do you think of Manchester as a cultural city? Oh, there s a very diverse cultures, Manchester and you get all walks of life don t you, blacks, Asians, lot of Polish influence now and Czech now, yeah--, yeah, there s quite a lot, like, you know. Male, 30s, Ancoats..there s someone up the road and if I was walking down the road with her I would not be talking about going to an art gallery because she d just be like, You what? She really would she d just be thinking, Who do you think you are? cause that s--, there s still a lot of people like that round here unfortunately, you know. And I m not saying I m better either, you know. Female, 30s, Levenshulme the general area has gone down We ve got a park over there, yeah, well I go in there because I play bowls But other than that we ve got nothing. No picture houses. We used to have two picture houses just across the road. They re both gone All of the new buildings they re putting up [in the City Centre], I don t like them I ll stay away from it They re supposed to be modernising it, but I think they re ruining it. And that--, what s the other building? That one on Corporation Street. Bit of a museum it s supposed to be Urbis. I think that s an eyesore. Male, 60s, Gorton

The social life of methods Cultural policy evaluation model - limited because tools for evaluating department performance against targets rather than understanding the dynamics of participation Effect of cross-sectional, indicator-based approach is to abstract from social, spatial and temporal context Yet adherence to positivist social science and consumer segmentation approaches from market research which relegate qualitative methods to an inferior, anecdotal status, is not a neutral choice Following Savage (2010) can be seen in terms of the rise of a technical middle class in post-war Britain underpins emerging technocratic concerns to subject social life to inspection and scrutiny from 1960s onwards Triumph of transparent modern over partial gentlemanly social science centrally implicated in the Audit Society and the New Public Management of the 1980s and 90s. Reflects changing configuration of the cultural establishment in which the authority of the post-war intellectual aristocracy is vanquished by neoliberalism (Griffiths et al 2008, Miles and Savage 2012)

Conclusions Cultural policy not a socially neutral realm but (an historically) contested arena in which the chosen technologies of validation help to shape social boundaries Looking beyond official models and measures of participation - non users detached but not excluded and some are interested in the arts For the sector, the value and values of everyday participation are not to be dismissed or written out but explored and understood Reassertion of class using perspectives from cultural (esp. Bourdieusian) sociology and mixed methods research important resources for cultural policy studies