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Week 6 : Theories of Reception & Taste. Mid-Summer Night Swing Dancing at the Lincoln Center, NYC http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhGx4Rh0Qo8. “Headbangers”--Heavy metal fans. Plan for Class Today. Lecture: Introduction to Theories of Publics, Reception & Taste
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Week 6 : Theories of Reception & Taste Mid-Summer Night Swing Dancing at the Lincoln Center, NYC http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhGx4Rh0Qo8 “Headbangers”--Heavy metal fans
Plan for Class Today • Lecture: Introduction to Theories of Publics, Reception & Taste • More presentations of First Short Case Studies • IF TIME: Videoclip from “Breaking Boundaries, Testing Limits”
Recall : Last Lecture “Participants in art worlds” Creators/artists art Mediators Audiences/publics/consumers
Problems with “Cultural Diamond” Model Source: V. Alexander Sociology of the Arts…(2003), p. 63.
Relation to Theories of Communication • Transmission Models of Communication from the Communications, Cultural and Media Studies Infobase expecially: • Shannon-Weaver Model of Communication, • Lasswell Formula,
Example of Tranmission Model: Lasswell Formula • Communication as transmission from source to receiver • Research Uses: Study of Propaganda
Critique of Transmission Models • Problems with • Conduit metaphor • Needs to be contextualized • Variations with channel/media • Relationships between “senders” and “receivers” • Semiotics • Politics of interpretation • Indeterminency, multiple meanings (polysemy) etc..
Other General Models • Braddock : 'Who says what to whom under what circumstances through what medium and with what effect? (subdivision into 84 elements) • McLuhan (7 elements): source of information, the sensing process, sending, the flight of information or transportation of information, receiving, decision-making, the action • Gerbner (10): (1)Someone (2)perceives an (3)event and (4)reacts in a (5)situation through some (6)means to make available (7)materials in some (8)form and (9)context conveying (10)content of some consequence.
Communication as ritual (Carey) “Maintenance of a society in time” “Construction of an ordered and meaningful world” • Not mutually exclusive-- how are “significant” forms created, apprehended and used?
Another theoretical stream: Communication Studies & Semiotics • To overcome “reductivist” theories of “transmission” • Meaning-making as process, politics of “signification” • Context, content, intentions, media… • Signifying systems
Examples of Studies of “Reception” in research on Art Worlds • “Types of Musical Listeners” (Theodor Adorno, and R. Peterson’s work on omnivores/univores) • music as an affordance, a technology of the self (Tia DeNora) • Reception as part of the mediation process in Actor Network Theory (Antoine Hennion) • aesthetics of reception (H.R. Jauss)
The Arts & Identity Politics in Studies of of Publics • labeling, status distinctions • symbolic boundaries • taste groups, shared values Elvis Presley Fans & Impersonators: Elvis’n Me website
Place of Publics in art-society relations & communications • Publics as part of social processes of creation of belief in art • Impact of the arts on publics • tastes & status, • identity issues, • as education (about social issues) • Terminology (implies different theoretical approaches) • Audience (readership, viewers etc.) • Public • Peers, Connoisseurs, Fans, General Public • Consumer (arts management term– economic connotation)
Theories of reception as production or mediation processes • avoid extremes (Zolberg) • audiences not totally autonomous free agents (“Death of the Artist) • not totally “sheep” (theory of the “masses”) • reception part of creation/mediation process (Critical Theory)--horizon of expectations • H.R. Jauss--School of Constance, • Umberto Eco--open work • ‘appropriation’ of art (DeNora)–public transforms the art, an active process (ex. DJ culture)
Types of publics • classification according to knowledge & position in art worlds • uninformed (general public), • connoisseurs(fans, experts) • critics (insiders), • peers • other classifications
themes of “populism” vs. “elitism” in audience studies • historic conflict between elitism & equality • DiMaggio on Boston “Brahmins” • Theodor Adorno--serious vs. sybaritic • Lynes & Bourdieu-- different approaches to lifestyles & tastes • Herbert Gans-- art as a human right (part of democratization discourse) • blurring of boundaries between high/lowbrow art worlds • but different styles & genres made for & adopted by different social groups
Adorno’s Typology of Ways of listening • hierarchy of ways of listening--”Types of Musical Contuct” in Sociology of Music (1962) • expert listener--full awareness (musical logic & technique) • good listener--unconscious mastery • “amateur”-- culture consumer--ex. well-informed collector • emotional listener • resentment listener-- seeming non-conformist (scorns official music) • entertainment • indifferent, unmusical anti-musical
Other types of Studies of audiences/publics • Tastes as Status Markers (Demaggio, Halle) • Identity Politics in Context (Ehrenreich & Fiske) • Readings: • DiMaggio, Paul on Cultural Entrepreneurship. • Ehrenreich, et al. on “Beatlemania. A Sexually Defiant Consumer Subculture?” in Gelder, Ken and Thornton, Sarah, The Subcultures Reader, Routledge, London and New York, 1997, pp. 523-536 • Fiske, John. “Elvis: A Body of Controversy”, Power Plays, Power Works. London: Verso, 1993, pp. 94-107, 122-3.
DeMaggio & cultural entrepreneurship • Organizational emphasis • Issues of transformation of arts to High culture model through institutionalization process • status hierarchy in society & status of the arts created by building symbolic capital & economic power (Bourdieu)
Ehrenreich et al “Beatlemania” • Publics and fans as part of social & political process of change • Social change & youth movements (British & American Cultural Studies approach) • Reception of art (Beetlemania) in context of change of women’s roles & “sexual revolution”
Fiske on Elvis • Draws on sociological notions of Michel Foucault • Body as a site of social control • Elvis’s image/body studied • During lifetime (transgressions of conventional uses of the body by musicians) • After death (Elvis lives mythology & immitators)
Halle’s study Inside Culture (audiences/publics, art genres, status) • what art do people have in their homes in different socio-economic neighbourhoods? • Methods: visited homes, photographed them, did floor plans, interviewed people • empirical study with theoretical implications
Definition of art-cultural items (Halle) • High culture—originals of financial or aesthetic value • Middlebrow – reproductions & works of little value in international art markets • Extended—broad range of visual images, including family photos etc.
Factors linking art/culture <consumption> with power • identity • status • Ideology • Other?????
What Halle described • The House as context– different styles of homes & places art was displayed • Class similarities & differences in different <genres>: • Landscapes • Portraits & family photos • Abstract art • Primitive art • Religious art
Landscapes • popularity in all social classes • Class differences in • peopled & not-peopled landscapes • Foreign • Named artist or not • And more
Portraits & family photos • Class differences in • Photos of family members (common in middle & working class, rare in upper-class homes)—different definition of what constitutes <art> • Painted portraits, etc.. • Interviews about attitudes towards portraits
Abstract Art • Homes with or without it (10 times as many in upper-class neighbourhoods) • Likes or dislikes (twice as many liked it in rich neighbourhoods but still one third liked it in working class area) • Comparison of reasons
Another Approach: “Uses” of the arts in everyday life:De Nora • interviews with 52 women • four ethnographies of music in social settings • karaoke at local pub • music therapy sessions • aerobics classes • retail clothing outlets
Theoretical Basis of De Nora’s study • music as a medium for • “social agency”, “identity work”, constitution of the self • emotional work • energy levels • body, intimacy • reflexivity (self-monitoring & self identity)
De Nora’s findings • knowledge of music & self-knowledge of needs • Choices of music in certain places at certain times (music effects) • active role of listeners (how individuals “configure” themselves) • music as a resource (“affordance”)-- • feeling, desire, action, energy • music & mental concentration • music & identity construction & others • intimate, romantic, emotions, memories • overview-- appropriations of music as a technology of the self
Example of Artists Approach to Publics as participants in Art Making: Theories of Reception. • Vitaly Komar and Alex Melamid’s national surveys about taste in art and what art would look like if artists gave people what they say they want http://www.diacenter.org/km/
Ex. Use of audiences/patrons by artists • Komar & Melamid-- Painting by Numbers.– publics tastes as sources of ‘inspiration’ but mocking
Use of art to provoke socio-political actions • Joachim Gerz– Hamburg monument against fascism • Public invited to sign monument– leds to destruction of the work of art • Gran Fury and aids activism
Other approaches to Reception (later in course) • Studies of rejection of art & controversies (ex. Mitchell, Gamboni) • Art and Collective memory Studies (monuments & public art: ex. Bologna)