Exploring patterns of children’s cultural participation: parental cultural capitals and their transmission

A. Leguina, I. Karademir-Hazır, Francisco Azpitarte
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Cultural participation during childhood significantly impacts an individual’s chances of future social mobility and well-being. Research to date has focused disproportionately on adults’ cultural practices, failing to comprehensively examine how children’s cultural participation is formed, structured and linked to their parents’. Drawing upon data from the Taking Part Survey, this article first examines the cultural profiles that emerge in children’s participation in England (including highbrow, eclectic, popular or restricted) and then employs regression techniques to disentangle the effects of parental capital (level of education versus cultural participation profile) on children’s cultural profiles. The analysis provides the greater granularity needed to understand the relative strength and significance of parentally embodied versus institutionalised cultural capital in children’s varying forms of engagement with arts and culture. While the patterns of intergenerational transmission revealed in the study largely confirm the role of institutionalised cultural capital in the reproduction of cultural inequality, they also reveal the significance of parental participation for children’s cultural participation. This highlights the need to approach cultural mobility and arts engagement policies at the household level rather than targeting children individually.
儿童文化参与模式探析:父母文化资本及其传播
童年时期的文化参与对个人未来的社会流动性和福祉有重大影响。迄今为止的研究主要集中在成年人的文化习俗上,未能全面研究儿童的文化参与是如何形成、组织和与父母的文化参与联系起来的。根据参与调查的数据,本文首先考察了英国儿童参与的文化概况(包括高雅、折衷、流行或限制),然后采用回归技术来分析父母资本(教育水平与文化参与概况)对儿童文化概况的影响。该分析提供了更大的粒度,以了解父母体现的文化资本与制度化的文化资本在儿童参与艺术和文化的不同形式中的相对强度和重要性。虽然研究中揭示的代际传播模式在很大程度上证实了制度化文化资本在文化不平等再生产中的作用,但它们也揭示了父母参与对儿童文化参与的重要性。这凸显了在家庭层面上处理文化流动和艺术参与政策的必要性,而不是针对个别儿童。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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