ABSTRACT

Fields, Capitals, Habitus provides an insightful analysis of the relations between culture and society in contemporary Australia. Presenting the findings of a detailed national survey of Australian cultural tastes and practices, it demonstrates the pivotal significance of the role culture plays at the intersections of a range of social divisions and inequalities: between classes, age cohorts, ethnicities, genders, city and country, and the relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

The book looks first at how social divisions inform the ways in which Australians from different social backgrounds and positions engage with the genres, institutions and particular works of culture and cultural figures across six cultural fields: the visual arts, literature, music, heritage, television and sport. It then examines how Australians’ cultural preferences across these fields interact within the Australian ‘space of lifestyles’. The close attention paid to class here includes an engagement with role of ‘middlebrow’ cultures in Australia and the role played by new forms of Indigenous cultural capital in the emergence of an Indigenous middle class.

The rich survey data is complemented throughout by in-depth qualitative data provided by interviews with survey participants. These are discussed more closely in the final part of the book which explores the gendered, political, personal and community associations of cultural tastes across Australia’s Anglo-Celtic, Italian, Lebanese, Chinese and Indian populations. The distinctive ethical issues associated with how Australians relate to Indigenous culture are also examined.

In the light it throws on the formations of cultural capital in a multicultural settler colonial society, Fields, Capitals, Habitus makes a landmark contribution to cultural capital research.

part I|106 pages

Fields

chapter 2|17 pages

Book Value

Reading the Australian literary field

chapter 3|17 pages

The Mark of Time

Temporality and the dynamics of distinction in the music field

chapter 5|17 pages

Television

The dynamics of a field in transition

chapter 6|17 pages

Contesting National Culture

The sport field

part III|80 pages

Capitals

chapter 10|20 pages

The Persistence of Inequality

Education, class and cultural capital

chapter 11|16 pages

Capital Geographies

Mapping the spaces of urban cultural capital

chapter 12|23 pages

Indigenous Cultural Tastes and Capitals

Gendered and class formations

part IV|65 pages

Habitus

chapter 14|12 pages

Engendering Culture

Accumulating capital in the gendered household

chapter 16|18 pages

The Politics of Consumption

Positioning the nation

chapter 18|8 pages

Conclusion

‘Distinction’ after Distinction