The love of art : European art museums and their public

Bibliographic Information

The love of art : European art museums and their public

Pierre Bourdieu and Alain Darbel with Dominique Schnapper ; translated by Caroline Beattie and Nick Merriman

Stanford University Press, 1990

Other Title

L'amour de l'art : les musées d'art européens et leur public

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Note

Bibliography: p. 174-176

Includes index

Translated from the French: "L'amour de l'art : les musées d'art européens et leur public"

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Everyone can visit the art treasures held in the great museums of the world yet, in fact, art museums are visited by only a small segment of the population. What are the characteristics of those who display their love of art by strolling through the galleries of museums? What distinguishes them from the majority of people who are effectively excluded, or exclude themselves, from their doors? This classic study addresses such questions on the basis of a wide-ranging survey of museums and museum visitors in France, Greece, Spain, Italy, The Netherlands, and Poland. Central to the analysis of Pierre Bourdieu and his associates is the elaboration of the theory of culture as a form of capital. This work shows that art is of great value in society as cultural capital, yet to a great extent the appreciation of art is considered intensely personal, an innate taste, an appurtenance of aristocracy, something ineffable. Bourdieu challenges this idea, asserting that it is merely one aspect of the ideological underpinnings of social inequality; further, that the power of the idea is such that it has come to pervade the beliefs of even culturally deprived groups, so that they accept and become accomplices in their exclusion and subordination. He reveals those mechanisms of society that together produce our conceptions of art, the artist, the public, and the creation of cultural value through semi-autonomous processes and institutions.<

Table of Contents

  • Translators' note
  • Preface
  • 1. Signs of the times
  • 2. The research process
  • 3. The social conditions of cultural practice
  • 4. Cultural works and cultivated disposition
  • 5. The rules of cultural diffusion
  • 6. Conclusion
  • Appendices
  • Notes
  • Select bibliography
  • Index.

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