Changing Highbrow Taste: From Snob to Omnivore Author(s): Richard A. Peterson and Roger M. Kern Source: American Sociological Review, Vol. 61, No. 5 (Oct., 1996), pp. 900-907 Published by: American Sociological Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2096460 Accessed: 02/09/2010 14:51 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at http://links.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at http://links.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=asa. Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. American Sociological Association is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to American Sociological Review. http://links.jstor.org CHANGING HIGHBROW TASTE: FROM SNOB TO OMNIVORE* RichardA. Peterson RogerM. Kern VanderbiltUniversity VanderbiltUniversity Appreciationoffine arts becamea markof high status in the late nineteenth century as part of an attemptto distinguish "highbrowed"Anglo Saxons from the new "lowbrowed"immigrants,whosepopular entertainmentswere said to corruptmoralsand thuswereto be shunned(Levine1988; DiMaggio 1991). In recentyears, however,manyhigh-statuspersons arefar from being snobs and are eclectic, even "omnivorous,"in their tastes (Petersonand Simkus1992). Thissuggests a qualitativeshift in the basisfor markingelite status-from snobbish exclusion to omnivorousappropriation. Using comparable 1982 and 1992 surveys, we test for this hypothesized change in tastes. Weconfirmthathighbrowsare moreomnivorousthanothersand that they have become increasingly omnivorousover time. Regression analyses reveal that increasing "omnivorousness"is due both to cohort replacement and to changes over the 1980s among highbrowsof all ages. Wespeculate that this shiftfrom snob to omnivorerelates to status-grouppolitics influenced by changes in social structure,values, art-worlddynamics,and generational conflict. ]\Not only are high-statusAmericans far more likely thanothersto consume the fine arts but, according to Peterson and Simkus (1992), they are also more likely to be involved in a wide rangeof low-status activities. This finding confirms the observations of DiMaggio (1987) and Lamont (1992), butit flies in the face of years of historical researchshowing thathigh-statuspersons shun cultural expressions that are not seen as elevated (Lynes 1954; Levine 1988; Murphy1988; Beisel 1990). In makingsense of this contradiction, Peterson and Simkus (1992) suggest that a historical shift from highbrowsnob to omnivore is taking place. MEASURES The 1982 nationalsurvey on which Peterson and Simkus (1992) base their findings was replicated in 1992, so it is now possible to test for the changes in highbrow taste that they posit.' Both surveys ask respondentsto select the music genres they like from a list of alternatives ranging across the aesthetic spectrum, and then to pick the one kind of music they like the best. We focus on musical taste, ratherthan taste for other types of artbecause only for music were respondents asked to choose from such a list of contrasting alternatives. Highbrowis operationalizedas liking both classical music and opera, and choosing one of these forms as best-liked from among all * Direct correspondence to Richard A. Peterson, Department of Sociology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235. We thank Narasimhan Anand, Bethany Bryson, Paul DiMaggio, Michael Epelbaum, Larry Griffin, Michael Hughes, Guillermina Jasso, Barbara Kilbourne, Michele Lamont, Holly McCammon, Claire Peterson, and Darren Sherkat for comments on the methodology or on an earlierdraftof this paper. Early versions were presented at the 1994 annualmeeting of the AmericanSociological Association in Los Angeles, at Princeton and HarvardUniversities, and at the New School for Social Research. Finally, we gratefully acknowledge the supportof the National Endowment for the Arts and of its Director of Research, Thomas Bradshaw. I The datacome fromthe Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, which polled two nationalarea probabilitysamples of persons over age 18, one in 1982 and the other in 1992. The surveys were conducted by the U.S. Bureauof the Census for the National Endowment of the Arts. For a detailed description of these data sets see Robinson et al. (1985) and Robinson (1993). 900 AmericanSociological Review, 1996, Vol. 61 (October:900-907) CHANGING HIGHBROW TASTE 901 kinds of music. This measureappearsto be a valid index of being highbrowbecause those respondents we labeled highbrow attended performances of plays, ballet, classical music, musicals, visited art galleries, and attended opera significantly more often than did others in the sample. Among highbrows, the snob is one who does not participatein any lowbrow or middlebrow activity (Levine 1988), while the omnivore is at least open to appreciating them all. Perfect snobs are now rare in the United States. Indeed, in the 1960s Wilensky (1964:194) "could not find one [Detroitarea resident] in 1,354 who was not in some area exposed to middle- or low-brow material," and in our national sample of 11,321 we found just 10 highbrowrespondentsin 1982 and 3 in 1992 who said they did not like a single form of low- or middlebrowmusic. We operationalize omnivorousness as a variable thatcan be measuredas the number of middle- and lowbrow forms respondents choose. Following Wilensky (1964) and Rubin (1992), we differentiate between middlebrow and lowbrow because they are distinctly different and because critical observers have suggested thatwhen highbrows areopen to non-highbrowartforms,theyseek out lowbrow forms created by socially marginal groups (Blacks, youth, isolated rural folks) while still holdingcommercialmiddlebrowforms in contempt(Lynes 1954; Sontag 1966). Five music genres areconsideredlowbrow: country music, bluegrass, gospel, rock, and blues. Eachof these genres is rootedin a specific "marginal"ethnic, regional, age, or religious experience (Malone 1979; Lipsitz 1990; Ennis 1992). There are three middlebrow music genres-including mood/easylistening music, Broadwaymusicals, andbig band music. These forms have been in the mainstreamof commercialmusic throughout the twentiethcentury(Goldberg 1961;Nanry 1972; Ennis 1992).2 The lowbrow measure can range from 0 to 5; the middlebrowmeasure can rangefrom 0 to 3. Omnivorousness can rangefrom 0 to 8. In both years (1982 and 1992) highbrows, on average, have about two years more education, earnaboutfive thousanddollars more annual family income, are about 10 years older, are more likely to be White, and are more likely to be female than are others in the sample.3All of these differences are statistically significant. Neither highbrows nor others, however, are more likely to be currently married.4 FINDINGS The top row of Table 1 shows that, on average, highbrows chose 1.74 lowbrow genres of 5 possible in 1982 and2.23 in 1992, a statistically significant increase of nearly half a genre per person in just one decade. This finding is in line with the prediction of increasing highbrowomnivorousness.The first row also shows that others increased their numberof lowbrow choices as well, but the rateof change for highbrowsis significantly greaterthanfor non-highbrows(p < .05, difference of proportions test). Also, in the 1982-1992 decade, highbrowsovertook others in the numberof lowbrow genres chosen. In the second row of Table 1 we see thatin 1982highbrows,on average,likedalmosttwo of the three middlebrow music genres. This sharplycontradictsthe expectations of Lynes (1954) andSontag (1966) thathighbrowswill shun middlebrow forms, but is congruent 2 Both the 1982 and 1992 surveys asked about other musical forms as well. Barbershop, rap, reggae, New Age, and marchingband music, for example, were included in one survey year but not the other, so they could not be included except as noted below. In addition the category "folk"was rewordedin a way thatmadeit incomparable from one survey year to the next. Jazz was included on both years, but it was not put in either of the scales because, while its roots are clearly lowbrow, it is now taught in conservatories of music as highbrow and largely consumed as middlebrow (Leonard 1962; Nanry 1972; Ennis 1992), and survey data has clearly shown an unusually diffuse evaluation of what is called "jazz"by different people (DiMaggio and Ostrower 1990; Peterson and Simkus 1992). 3 Unfortunatelyrespondentsto the 1992 survey were not asked theiroccupation, so we cannot assess this importantcomponent of social class position as Peterson and Simkus (1992) did using the 1982 data. 4 Currently married respondents were distinguished fromall others because, on average, they attendartsperformancesless often than do those who are single, divorced, and widowed (DiMaggio andOstrower 1990). 902 AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW Table 1. Univariate Statistics for Highbrowsand Others, 1982 and 1992 Highbrows Others Variable 1982 1992 Difference 1982 1992 Difference Number of lowbrow 1.74 2.23 .49** 1.80 2.07 .27** music genres liked (max. = 5) Number of middlebrow 1.98 2.12 .14 1.01 1.12 I ** music genres liked (max. = 3) Percent male 44 35 -9 46 46 -2** Age in years 54.19 56.18 1.99 42.98 46.59 3.61** Family income $26,360 $33,304 $6,945** $20,614 $28,301 $7,686** Percent married 66 63 -3 64 64 0 Percent White 96 96 0 88 86 -2 Education in years 14.57 14.33 -.24 12.19 12.67 .48** <.05 level p < .10 level (one-tailed tests) Note: A highbrow is defined as a respondent who likes both opera and classical music and chooses one of these forms as the music genre he or she likes best. with Peterson and Simkus's (1992) ideas aboutomnivorousnessbecausehighbrowsare found to like more middlebrow forms than others and because this difference increases (althoughnot significantly statistically) from 1982 to 1992. Takentogether,these findings suggest that in 1992 highbrows, on average, are more omnivorous thanthey were in 1982 andhave become moreomnivorousthanothers.At the same time, non-highbrows are increasing their numberof musical preferences as well. Withjust these two datapoints it is not possible to say definitely whetherthereis a long- termseculartrendtowardomnivorousnessor whether the change is due to forces just affecting the decade understudy.We returnto these questions below. Did all highbrows tend to become more omnivorous between 1982 and 1992-in other words, could the difference be called a period effect (Rogers 1982)? Alternatively, did individual highbrows retain their tastes unchanged, with the observed difference resulting from older cohorts of highbrows with more snob-like tastes being displaced by younger, more omnivorous cohorts? Abramson and Inglehart (1993), for example, show that cohort replacement has dramatically changed values in eight Western nations. Cohortis here measuredas year of birth(Rogers 1982). To answer these questions, we pool the two years of data and employ four OLS regression analyses. The dependent variable in each analysis is the number of middlebrow or lowbrow genres chosen by highbrows and by others, analyzed separately. The independent variables of interest in each of the analyses are the birth year of the respondent (measured by subtracting the respondent's age from the year of the interview) and the year of the interview (measured as a dummy variable; 1 = 1992). A number of variables have been shown to influence arts participation independent of age.5 These include education, gender, race, (measured here as Whites versus others), adjusted family income,6 and the size of the respondent's residential community7 (DiMaggio and Useem 1978; Blau 1989; DiMaggio and 5 Each control variable was tested for interactions with both birth year and year of interview, and no significant interactionswere found. 6 Because family income was reported in categories, the midpoint of the respondent's income category was subtractedfrom the mean of the income midpoints for the year in which the interview took place. This transformationmeans that the income distributionsfor each year were set to a mean of zero, nullifying any effect of inflation while retaining the effect of changing distributions of income across years. 7 This was measured in 12 categories ranked from small to large. CHANGING HIGHBROW TASTE 903 Table 2. OLS Coefficients from the Regression of Number of Lowbrow and Middlebrow Musical Genres Liked on Birth Year, Year of Interview, and Selected Control Variables Highbrows Others (Model 1) (Model 2) (Model 3) (Model 4) Number of Number of Number of Number of Lowbrow Middlebrow Lowbrow Middlebrow Genres Liked Genres Liked Genres Liked Genres Liked Variables b Beta b Beta b Beta b Beta Birth year .02 .16++ -.01 -.07 .01 .12++ -.01 -.23++ Year of interview .44 .15+ .25 .13+ .20 .07++ .15 .07++ (1 = 1992) Control Variables Male -.07 -.02 -.20 -.10 .01 .01 -.20 -.09** Adjusted family .00 -.1 1 .01 .04 .00 .01 .00 .12** income White -.92 -.13 .60 .13* .18 .05** .38 .12** Education in years .05 .10 .00 .01 .05 .11 .10 .28** Size of community -.01 -.04 .00 .02 -.02 -.08** .02 .08** Constant -27.45* 9.25 -16.61 ** 26.20** Significance of F .00 .12 .00 .00 Adjusted R2 .06 .02 .06 .16 Number of 354 354 10,967 10,967 respondents +p < .05 ++p< .01 (one-tailed tests) *p < .05 **p< .01 (two-tailed tests) Ostrower 1990; Robinson 1993). Each of these could conceivably influence the degree of omnivorousness, so they are included as control variables. Marital status was not included as a control variable because it was not significantly linked with the numberof music genres chosen. The results of the four OLS regression analyses are presented in Table 2. The positive coefficient for birth year in Model I shows that,controlling for the yearof the interview andthe othervariables,highbrowsin latercohorts like significantly more lowbrow forms than do older highbrows. The size of the effect is such that two people born 20 years apartdiffer by .40 (20 x .02 =.40) music genres chosen. The positive effect of 1992 interview year shows that, net of the controls, highbrows interviewed in 1992 liked significantly more lowbrow music genres thanhighbrowsdid a decade earlier,indicating an increase of .44 forms chosen. Turningto the numberof middlebrowmusic genres liked by highbrows, Model 2 shows that birth year has no effect on middlebrow music taste, but highbrows interviewed in 1992 did like significantly more middlebrow genres than did those interviewed a decade earlier, an increase of .25 genres. Taken together, these results show that both cohort replacement and period effects increase highbrows' tastes for lowbrow music, while only period effects increase theirtaste for middlebrowmusic. The resultsof the OLS regressionanalyses for non-highbrows are shown in Models 3 and4 of Table2. We see a patternsimilar to thatfor highbrows:Controllingfor the other variables in the model, in 1992 non-highbrows liked more low- and middlebrow music genres than they had in 1982, and younger cohorts of non-highbrows liked more lowbrow genres and fewer middlebrowgenres thandid older cohorts. DISCUSSION Taken together, the findings of this study supportthe assertion that omnivorousness is replacing snobbishness among Americans of 904 AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW highbrowstatus.The change is due in partto cohortdisplacement,buthas occurredmostly because highbrowsof all ages are becoming more omnivorous. This is not to say that most highbrows have become perfect omnivores. (In 1982 only eight and in 1992 only seven highbrowssaid thatthey liked all other types of music.) The point is that in 1992 highbrows, on average, reported liking significantlymorekindsof nonelite music of all genres than did highbrows a decade earlier and also that in 1992 highbrows are more omnivorous than non-highbrows.This latter finding is strengthenedby using the information on all 17 nonelite genres of music included in the 1992 survey.Highbrowsreport liking 7.49 of the 17 genres of music included in 1992 versus 4.84 genres, on average, for the non-highbrows, and this difference is significant.8In addition, the findings for non-highbrowsshow thatthe increasebetween 1982 and 1992 in the numberof music genres liked, while greatestamong highbrows, is a society-wide trend. Theorizing on Omnivorousness The omnivorousness of high-statuspersons, as reportedby Peterson and Simkus (1992), is an empirical generalization and does not provide an explanation for why there has been such a profound shift in the way high status is designated. Having found strong support for the shift from snobbishness to omnivorousness,we now focus briefly on the omnivore concept and suggest a numberof factors thatcontributeto this shift. As we understandthe meaningof omnivorous taste, it does not signify that the omnivore likes everything indiscriminantly. Rather,it signifies an openness to appreciating everything. In this sense it is antithetical to snobbishness, which is based fundamentally on rigid rules of exclusion (Bourdieu [1979] 1984; Murphy 1988) such as: "It is de rigueur to like opera, and country music is an anathema to be shunned." While by definition hostile to snobbish closure (Murphy 1988), omnivorousness does not imply an indifference to distinctions. Rather its emergence may suggest the formulation of new rules governing symbolic boundaries (LamontandFournier1992). Several studies have shown that criteriaof distinction, of which omnivorousness is one expression, mustcenternoton whatone consumes but on the way items of consumption are understood. Bourdieu ([1979] 1984, [1965] 1990), for example, contrasts unreflective consumptionfor personalenjoyment with intellectualized appreciation.He identifies intellectualizedappreciationin ways that most easily fit a monolithic symbolic landscape appropriate to the era of the elitist snob.Nonetheless, the cultureof critical discourse (Gouldner1979) centralto Bourdieu's view is also amenable to a discriminating omnivorousness if the ethnocentrismcentral to snobbish elitism is replaced by cultural relativism. Under these conditions, cultural expressions of all sorts are understood in whatrelativists call their own terms.9 If this indeed is the way omnivores mark symbolic boundaries, they do not embrace contemporarycountrymusic, for example, as representinghow they identify themselves as do hard-core country music fans (Peterson and Kern 1995). Rather,they appreciateand critiqueit in the light of some knowledge of the genre, its great performers,and links to otherculturalforms, lowbrow andhighbrow. Intellectuals have long provided the grounds for an aesthetic understandingof jazz, blues, rock, and bluegrass music. More recently country music has begun to be taken seriously as magazine articles in elite cultural periodicals such as American Heritage (Scherman 1994) and books by humanist scholars (Tichi 1994) begin to provideomnivores with the tools they need to develop an aesthetic understandingof countrymusic. Whythe Historic Shift from Snobbishness to Omnivorousness? Changes in fashion are often ephemeral (Davis 1992), but a shift in the basis of taste from snobbishness to omnivorousness sug- 8 The significance of the difference between these two means is inferredfrom a test of the difference of proportions of the number of music genres liked by highbrows and others, which is significant at the p < .01 level (one-tailed test). 9 As critical thinking within anthropology has madeclear, the idea of "culturalrelativism"itself is a form of hubrisbecause it is impossible for an outsider to experience another's culture as a native does (Clifford and Marcus 1986). CHANGING HIGHBROW TASTE 905 gests that significant alterations in social power relationships are involved (Williams 1961). In concluding we speculatively suggest five linked factors that may contribute to the shifting grounds of status-grouppolitics (Shiach 1989). Structural change. A number of social processes at workover thepastcenturymake exclusion increasingly difficult. Rising levels of living, broadereducation, and presentation of the arts via the media have made elite aesthetic taste more accessible to wider segments of the population, devaluing the artsas markersof exclusion. At the same time, geographic migration and social class mobility have mixed people holding differenttastes.And the increasingly ubiquitous mass media have introduced the aesthetic tastes of different segments of the population to each other. Thus the diverse folkways of the rest of the world's population areever moredifficult to exclude, andat the same time, they areincreasinglyavailable for appropriationby elite taste-makers(Lipsitz 1990). Value change. If structuralchanges shape the opportunity, value changes concerning gender, ethnic, religious, and racial differences rationalize the change from snob to omnivore. In the nineteenth century group prejudice was widely sanctified by scientific theory andexpressed society-wide in laws of exclusion. This changed gradually, and the Nazi brutalities of WorldWarII gave "racism" of all sorts such a bad name that most discriminatory laws in this country have since been abolished. It is now increasingly rare for persons in authoritypublicly to espouse theories of essential ethic and racial group differences (Takaki 1993).10 The change fromexclusionist snob to inclusionist omnivore can thus be seen as a part of the historical trend toward greater tolerance of those holding different values (Inglehart 1990; Abramsonand Inglehart 1993). Art-World change. Developments in the fine artworldsover the past one andone-half centuries first provided the theories and the modes of display for the makingof the high- 10 Essentialist arguments are still often made concerning certain behavioral differences between the sexes and as explanations for sexual orientation(the latteraremadebothby advocates for andopponents of gay men and lesbians). brow into snob and more recently provided the rationale for the omnivore. The elitist theorists of the early nineteenthcentury EuropeanRoyal Academies of music, painting, drama,anddance arguedamong themselves, butthey stood unitedin theirbelief thatthere was one standardand that all other expressions were vulgarities (White and White 1965). Thus they created an aesthetic and moralenvironmentin which highbrow snobbery flourished (Arnold 1875:44-47; Levine 1988:171-241). The market forces that swept through all the arts broughtin their wake new aesthetic entrepreneurs who propounded avantguardist theories that placed positive value on seeking new and ever more exotic modes of expression, but in the latter half of the twentiethcenturythe candidatesbeing championed for inclusion were so numerous and theiraesthetic range so greatthatthe old criterion of a single standardbecame stretched beyond the point of credibility.It became increasingly obvious thatthe quality of artdid not inherein the workitself, butin the evaluations made by the artworld (Zolberg 1990: 53-106), and that expressions of all sorts from aroundthe world are open to aesthetic appropriation(Becker 1982). This is the aesthetic basis of the shift from the elitist exclusive snob to the elitist inclusive omnivore. Generational politics. Before the third quarterof the twentieth century youngsters were expected to like pop music and pop culture generally but to move on to more "serious"fare as they matured.Beginning in the 1950s, however, young White people of all classes embracedpopularAfricanAmerican dance music styles as their own under the rubric of rock'n'roll (Ennis 1992), and by the late 1960s what was identified as the "WoodstockNation" saw its own variegated youth culturenot so much as a "stage"to go throughin growing up but as a viable alternative to established elite culture (Lipsitz 1990; Aronowitz 1993), thus, in effect, discrediting highbrowexclusion and valorizing inclusion. One of the lasting impacts of this view is that not as many well-educated and well-to-do Americans born since WorldWar IIpatronize the elite arts as did their elders (Robinson 1993; Peterson and Sherkat 1995), and many say they like a wide array of musical forms (Schaefer 1987; Peterson 906 AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW and Sherkat 1995). Status-group politics. Dominant status groups have regularly defined popular culture in ways that fit their own interests and have worked to renderharmless subordinate status-group cultures (Sennett and Cobb 1972; Shiach 1989). One recurrentstrategy is to define popular culture as brutish and something to be suppressedor avoided (Arnold 1875; Elliot 1949; Bloom 1987); another is to gentrify elements of popularculture and incorporatethem into the dominant status-group culture (Leonard 1962; Tichi 1994). Our data suggest a major shift from the former strategy to the latter strategy of status grouppolitics. While snobbish exclusion was an effective markerof statusin a relatively homogeneous and circumscribed WASP-ish world that could enforce its dominance over all others by force if necessary, omnivorous inclusion seems better adaptedto an increasingly global world managedby those who make their way, in part, by showing respect for the cultural expressions of others. As highbrow snobbishness fit the needs of the earlier entrepreneurialupper-middleclass, there also seems to be an elective affinity between today's new business-administrative class and omnivorousness. Richard A. Peterson is Professor of Sociology at VanderbiltUniversity. WithRoger Kern,Michael Hughes and others, he is exploring the changing ways that tastes are used in signalling status differences. In connection he is editing a forthcoming special issue of Poetics: Journalof Empirical Research on Literature,the Media and the Arts. WithNarasimhan Anand, he is researching the role of information in structuring industrial fields. In addition, he is completinga monograph for the University of Chicago Press on thefabrication of authenticity and the institutionalization of thefield of "countrymusic." Roger M. Kern is a Ph.D. studentin Sociology at VanderbiltUniversity.He is currentlycompleting his dissertation, which explores the relationships between cultural capital and social stigma acquired in adolescence and the attainment of social status as an adult. Otherprojects include an analysis of countervailing relationships between parental social class and juvenile delinquency (with GaryJensen ), and a contentanalysis of the use of personal resources by upper-middle-class elites inpersonal advertisementsappearing in the New York Review of Books. REFERENCES Abramson, Paul R. and Ronald Inglehart. 1993. "GenerationalReplacement and Value Change in Eight West European Countries." British Journal of Politics 22:183-228. 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