The Persistence of Taste : Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu

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This book offers an interdisciplinary analysis of the social practice of taste in the wake of Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology of taste. For the first time, this book unites sociologists and other social scientists with artists and curators, art theorists and art educators, and art, design and cultural historians who engage with the practice of taste as it relates to encounters with art, cultural institutions and the practices of everyday life, in national and transnational contexts. The volume is divided into four sections. The first section on ‘Taste and art’, shows how art practice was drawn into the sphere of ‘good taste’, contrasting this with a post-conceptualist critique that offers a challenge to the social functions of good taste through an encounter with art. The next section on ‘Taste making and the museum’ examines the challenges and changing social, political and organizational dynamics propelling museums beyond the terms of a supposedly universal institution and language of taste. The third section of the book, ‘Taste after Bourdieu in Japan’ offers a case study of the challenges to the cross-cultural transmission and local reproduction of ‘good taste’, exemplified by the complex cultural context of Japan. The final section on ‘Taste, the home and everyday life’ juxtaposes the analysis of the reproduction of inequality and alienation through taste, with arguments on how the legacy of ideas of ‘good taste’ have extended the possibilities of experience and sharpened our consciousness of identity. As the first book to bring together arts practitioners and theorists with sociologists and other social scientists to examine the legacy and continuing validity of Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology of taste, this publication engages with the opportunities and problems involved in understanding the social value and the cultural dispositions of taste ‘after Bourdieu’. It does so at a moment when the practice of taste is being radically changed by the global expansion of cultural choices, and the emergence of deploying impersonal algorithms as solutions to cultural and creative decision-making.

Author(s): Malcolm Quinn, Dave Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch, Stephen Wilson
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: 386

Cover
Half title
Title page
Copyright page
Table of contents
List of figures
List of tables
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: taste, hierarchy and social value after Bourdieu
Part I: Taste and art
1 Historical drag: Bourdieu, taste and the bourgeois revolution
2 Transgressions in taste: libraries ornamental, gastronomical, and bibliomaniacal
3 Dialectics of taste and non-taste: archive as afterlife and life of art
4 The anti-spectator
5 The configurational encounter and the problematic of beholding
Part II: Taste making and the museum
6 Musealisierung: leadership, tastemaking, and cultural diplomacy
7 The (un)narrated, the (un)curated
8 Tasting Rembrandt: examining taste at the point-of-experience
9 'J'adore!': aesthetics in Bourdieu's account of tastes
10 For the love (or not) of art in Australia
11 Confessions of a recalcitrant curator: or how to reprogramme the global museum
Part III: Taste after Bourdieu in Japan: a case study
12 Beside Bourdieu: Japan, contemporary art, weeds and a fox
13 Nude art, censorship and modernity in Japan: from the 'Knickers Incident' of 1901 to now
14 Taste, snobbery and distinction on the periphery of European bourgeois hierarchies
15 Grotesque and cruel imagery in Japanese gender expression – Nobuyoshi Araki, Makoto Aida and Fuyuko Matsui
Part IV: Taste, the home and everyday life
16 The glamorous 'diasporic intimacy' of habitus: 'taste', migration and the practice of settlement
17 Mundane tastes: ubiquitous objects and the historical sensorium
18 "Inside-out" taste-making: the appearance of change in everyday style
19 Taste-cultures in the black British home
20 The sensorial wall
21 Taste, gender and the home: before and after Bourdieu
Coda: the tastemaker and the algorithm
Index