390 research outputs found
Cultural sociology and new forms of distinction
In recent years growing sociological interest in new forms of cultural distinction has led some to argue that the advantages previously conveyed by the consumption of âhighâ culture âor âomnivorousnessâ are being overwritten by the possession of what has been termed âemerging cultural capitalâ. So far, though, this term has only been discussed in passing within empirical work and remains in need of further analytical specification. This special issue seeks to both critically interrogate and develop this concept by bringing together the work of leading cultural sociologists around four key themes: the role of age and generation in the formation of cultural capital; the power of visual display for distinction; the significance of new elite cultures; and the need for methodological pluralism to apprehend the expressions and mechanisms of distinction. This editorial introduction outlines the descriptive terrain on which the concept of emerging cultural capital has rested until now before exploring the common themes that sit across all five papers in the special issue
Social mobility at the top: how elites in the UK are pulling away
The link between geographic mobility and the reproduction of social class advantage is having a powerful effect in British society, write Katharina Hecht, Daniel McArthur, Mike Savage, and Sam Friedman. Based on an original study of changing social and geographical mobility into elite occupations, they explain why the tensions between London and the English and Welsh 'provinces' have deep roots
The Development of a Bi-Lingual Assessment Instrument to Measure Agentic and Communal Consumer Motives in English and French
Consumer behavior is driven, in part, by the degree to which goods and services appeal to underlying motives for agency and communion. The purpose of this research was to develop a brief individual differences measure of these motivations for use in behavioral research and theoretical and applied consumer psychology and marketing studies. We employed a bi-lingual scale development procedure to create the 10-item Agentic and Communal Consumer Motivation Inventory (ACCMI) in English and French. Two studies show that the ACCMI is language invariant, demonstrates convergent and discriminant validity with consumer, motivational, and interpersonal constructs, and predicts evaluations of products described in agentic and communal terms, respectively, in both languages. The general conclusion of this research is that agency and communion provide a useful framework for understanding and studying consumer buying motivations. Discussion focuses on the relevance of motivational factors for studying human behavior and the applied utility of the ACCMI
Type II Supernova Light Curves and Spectra From the CfA
We present multiband photometry of 60 spectroscopically-confirmed supernovae
(SN): 39 SN II/IIP, 19 IIn, one IIb and one that was originally classified as a
IIn but later as a Ibn. Forty-six have only optical photometry, six have only
near infrared (NIR) photometry and eight have both optical and NIR. The median
redshift of the sample is 0.016. We also present 192 optical spectra for 47 of
the 60 SN. All data are publicly available. There are 26 optical and two NIR
light curves of SN II/IIP with redshifts z > 0.01, some of which may give rise
to useful distances for cosmological applications. All photometry was obtained
between 2000 and 2011 at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory (FLWO), via the
1.2m and 1.3m PAIRITEL telescopes for the optical and NIR, respectively. Each
SN was observed in a subset of the bands. There are a total
of 2932 optical and 816 NIR light curve points. Optical spectra were obtained
using the FLWO 1.5m Tillinghast telescope with the FAST spectrograph and the
MMT Telescope with the Blue Channel Spectrograph. Our photometry is in
reasonable agreement with other samples from the literature. Comparison with
Pan-STARRS shows that two-thirds of our individual star sequences have
weighted-mean V offsets within 0.02 mag. In comparing our standard-system
SN light curves with common Carnegie Supernova Project objects using their
color terms, we found that roughly three-quarters have average differences
within 0.04 mag. The data from this work and the literature will provide
insight into SN II explosions, help with developing methods for photometric SN
classification, and contribute to their use as cosmological distance
indicators.Comment: Accepted to ApJS. TAR of light curves and star sequences here:
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/supernova/fmalcolm2017/cfa_snII_lightcurvesndstars.june2017.tar
... Spectra can be found here:
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/supernova/fmalcolm2017/cfaspec_snII.tar.gz ...
Passbands and plot of spectra can be found here:
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/supernova/SNarchive.htm
Proverb preferences across cultures: Dialecticality or poeticality?
Peng and Nisbett (1999) claimed that members of Asian cultures show a greater preference than Euro-Americans for proverbs expressing paradox (so-called dialectical proverbs; e.g., Too humble is half proud). The present research sought to replicate this claim with the same set of stimuli used in Peng and Nisbettâs Experiment 2 and a new set of dialectical and nondialectical proverbs that were screened to be comparably pleasing in phrasing. Whereas the proverbs were rated as more familiar
and (in Set 1) more poetic by Chinese than by American participants, no group differences were found in relation to proverb dialecticality. Both the Chinese and Americans in our study rated the dialectical proverbs from Peng and Nisbettâs study as more likable, higher in wisdom, and higher in poeticality than the nondialectical proverbs. For Set 2, both groups found the dialectical proverbs to be as likable, wise, and poetic as the nondialectical proverbs. When poeticality was covaried out, dialectical proverbs were liked better than nondialectical proverbs across both stimulus sets by the Chinese and the
Americans alike, and when wisdom was covaried out, the effect of dialecticality was reduced in both sets and groups. Our findings indicate that caution should be taken in ascribing differences in proverb preferences solely to cultural differences in reasoning
On social class, anno 2014
This article responds to the critical reception of the arguments made about social class in Savage et al. (2013). It emphasises the need to disentangle different strands of debate so as not to conflate four separate issues: (a) the value of the seven class model proposed; (b) the potential of the large web survey â the Great British Class Survey (GBCS) for future research; (c) the value of Bourdieusian perspectives for re-energising class analysis; and (d) the academic and public reception to the GBCS itself. We argue that, in order to do justice to the full potential of the GBCS, we need a concept of class which does not reduce it to a technical measure of a single variable and which recognises how multiple axes of inequality can crystallise as social classes. Whilst recognising the limitations of what we are able to claim on the basis of the GBCS, we argue that the seven classes defined in Savage et al. (2013) have sociological resonance in pointing to the need to move away from a focus on class boundaries at the middle reaches of the class structure towards an analysis of the power of elite formation
Three Different Formalisations of Einsteinâs Relativity Principle
We present three natural but distinct formalisations of Einsteinâs special principle of relativity, and demonstrate the relationships between them. In particular, we prove that they are logically distinct, but that they can be made equivalent by introducing a small number of additional, intuitively acceptable axioms
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