Friday, January 04, 2013

Hipsters and Social Class


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Every group has signs of group identity, cultural identification, and values certain types of capital.  These all reflect what is perceived as part of unique group identity and part of prestige and are used to set themselves apart from others.  Hipsters are no different and their cultural and iconic sigils can be seen through the social class lens of cultural capital.

How many hipsters does it take to change a light bulb?  
A really obscure number that you’ve probably never heard of.  

Cultural capital was brought into the discussion of social class by Bourdieu in Forms of Capital (1986) who proposed embodied, objectified, and institutionalized forms.  Seen from a sociological perspective these forms of cultural capital are part of normative culture for each group.  Countercultures and alternative cultures emerge with different forms of capital often chosen in direct opposition or contrast to perceived mainstream culture.  Marlon Brando’s character Johnny Strabler or Lee Marvin’s character Chino in The Wild One (Kramer & Benedek, 1953) were models of a specific type of motorcycle riding, leather wearing, law breaking citizens.  These bikers shared dress, norms, and values as well as normative behaviors.  Similar media counter- and alternative-culture characters have been iconic; Bob Denver’s portrayal of the beatnik Maynard G. Krebbs in The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis or any nerd in movies from Revenge of the Nerds (1984) to Accepted (2006) portray a set of norms.  Cultural capital provides those characters with identifiable values.

Hipsters, according to media reports and jokes, value obscure cultural capital, obscure numbers that you probably never heard of, and obscure technology like vinyl records and mechanical typewriters.  Nerds are portrayed as valuing technology and intelligence, beatniks as valuing casual dress, jazz, and poetry, bikers as valuing the rejection of mainstream ideas of behavior.  Their counterparts, people in the mainstream culture, are portrayed as valuing mainstream culture, mainstream social capital, and economic capital, all of which seem to be rejected by hipsters.  Hipster social capital only counts in the hipster community, and relies on obscure knowledge valued by the tribe.  Economic capital, the quest of working mainstream normal people, is eschewed, much to the benefit of humorists who note the cost of the cultural capital artifacts required for the hipster life. 

A defining characteristic of hipster culture is cultural capital which is defined by members of that group as a way to set them apart from others.  Social capital and economic capital are of secondary, tertiary, or even quaternary interest.  

References 

Bourdieu, P. (1986). The forms of capital. In J. Richardson (Ed.) Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education (pp. 241-258). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. 

Field, T., Samuelson, P. (Producers), Macgregor-Scott, P. (Co-Producer) & Kanew, J. (Director). (1984). Revenge of the Nerds. US: 20th Century Fox.

Kramer, S. (Producer) & Benedek, L. (Director) (1953). The Wild One. [Motion Picture]. US: Columbia Pictures.

Shadyac, T. (Producer) & Pink, S. (Director). (2006). Accepted. [Motion Picture]. US: Universal Pictures.


Friday, December 07, 2012

What are poor and lower class people like?


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Work: service, retired, white collar, blue collar

Education: Some high school, high school graduate, some college,

Home:  Rent, own

Money and money management: low or below average assets

Shop: Express, The Limited, Lane Bryant, Wal-Mart, Home Shopping Network, Publisher’s Clearing House, Rite Aid, Avon, in home.

Read: Comic books, Vibe, Saturday Evening Post, Spin, Reader’s Digest, American Woodworker, OK! Magazine, American Legion Magazine, Motorcyclist, Good Housekeeping, Hunting, Essence, Jet, Town and Country, Women’s day, Parents,

Watch:  Maury, Jeopardy, Game show network, Dr. Phil, Sabado Gigante, Telemundo, The Price is Right, Jerry Springer, As the world turns, Soapnet, Primer Impacto, People’s Court, Judge Judy, The Young and the Restless

Drive: Kia Spectra, Rio, Suzuki Forenza, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Dodge Charger, Hundai Tiburon, Mercury Sable, Chevrolet Aveo, GMC Canyon, Ford Ranger, Ford Crown Victoria, Suzuki Reno, Chrusler 300, Mercury Grand Marquis, Dodge Ram.

Vacation, play, and travel: Bingo, Whitewater rafting, Gamble in Atlantic City or Reno, own a motor home, needlepoint, domestic travel on Jet Blue, collect stamps,

Insurance and memberships were not listed in the PRIZM descriptions for these groups.

Method

I have aggregated information from the 15 PRIZM market segments classified as Downscale and Low Income to describe the poor and lower social class.  This collection of 15 market segments is described as low to downscale.  Using US Census data this would be incomes under $40,000, or place these individuals in the lowest 40% by household income.

Market segmenting makes assumptions about consumption and creates clusters of people based on their consumer characteristics, age, and on where they live.  The Nielsen Company has identified 66 PRIZM market segments, http://www.claritas.com/MyBestSegments/Default.jsp 58 P$YCLE segments, and 53 ConneXions segments, and described them by demographics and lifestyle and media traits.

Commentary

These are not stereotypes, these are consumer behaviors based on research on what people report about themselves.  These data and descriptions are widely used by marketers in the US.  The underlying assumption here is that social class is reflected in consumer behaviors.  By looking closely it is clear that this group has little money.  This consumer assumption about social class does not reflect social class as culture or social class as identity.


Also:

What are upper-middle class people like?

What are upper-middle-middle class people like?

What are middle-middle class people like?

What are lower-middle-middle class people like?




What are lower-middle-middle class people like?


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Work: Service, white collar, retired

Education:  some high school, high school graduate, some college, college degree

Home: Rent, own

Money and money management: low, lower-mid, moderate, above average

Shop: Banana Republic , Victoria’s Secret, True Value, Macy’s, QVC, Lowe’s, Kmart, Wal-Mart, Columbia House, oldnavy.com, Sears, CVS, Walgreens, The Gap

Read: Latina, Elle, fraternal magazines, New Yorker, Ladies Home Journal, Four Wheeler, Family Handyman, Guns and Ammo, science fiction, Car Craft, Fit Pregnancy, North American Hunter, Seventeen, Life & Style, Ser Padres, Ebony

Watch:  Tyra, VH1, Wheel of Fortune, The View, One Life to Live, Speed Channel, CBS Early Show, satellite dish, auto racing, WWE Wrestling, Nick at Night, Outdoor Channel, Premio Juventud, Noticiero Univision, El Gordo Y La Flaca, BET

Drive: VW GTI, Suzuki SX4, Ford Taurus, Chrysler PT Cruiser, Kia Borrego, Dodge Ram, GMC Sierra, Chevrolet Colorado, Nissan Titan, Ford F-Series, VW GLI, Suzuki, Toyota Yaris, Nissan Pathfinder

Vacation, play, and travel: play soccer, karate, domestic travel by rail, domestic travel by bus, collect coins, fishing, sewing, camping, movies

Memberships: fraternal order

Method

I have aggregated information from the 15 PRIZM market segments classified as Lower-Mid, by Nielsen to describe the upper-middle social class.  PRIZM classifies this group as Lower-Mid, but from a researcher perspective, it is the lowest of three groups in the middle.

Market segmenting makes assumptions about consumption and creates clusters of people based on their consumer characteristics, age, and on where they live.  The Nielsen Company has identified 66 PRIZM market segments, 58 P$YCLE segments, and 53 ConneXions segments, and described them by demographics and lifestyle and media traits.

Commentary

These are not stereotypes, these are consumer behaviors based on research on what people report about themselves.  These data are widely used by marketers in the US.  The underlying assumption here is that social class is reflected in consumer behaviors.  This consumer assumption about social class does not reflect social class as culture or social class as identity.


Also:

What are upper-middle class people like?

What are upper-middle-middle class people like?

What are middle-middle class people like?

What are poor and lower class people like?

New Post The students guide to becoming upper-middle class

What are middle-middle class people like?


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Work: retired, service jobs, white collar

Education: some college, college graduate

Home:  rent, mostly homeowners

Money and money management: Low, below average, average, above average, to moderate assets

Shop: Ace Hardware, Orbitz.com, FedEx Kinkos, Marshalls, Kohl’s

Read: Audubon, Entrepreneur, Cycle World, Baby Talk, Smithsonian

Watch:  Masterpiece Theater, Family Guy, Scrubs, Univision, Live from Lincoln Center

Drive: Buick Lucerne, Subaru Outback, Mazda 6, Mitsubishi Lancer, Chevrolet Impala

Vacation, play, and travel:  NBA games, sing karaoke, cruise on Norwegian lines.

Memberships: Veteran’s club

Method

PRIZM classifies this group as Midscale, but from a researcher perspective, it is the middle of three groups in the middle. Classification into social class hierarchy depends on many things, but this group is in the middle of all Nielsen groups.  I have aggregated information from the 5 PRIZM market segments classified as Midscale by Nielsen.

Market segmenting makes assumptions about consumption and creates clusters of people based on their consumer characteristics, age, and on where they live.  The Nielsen Company has identified 66 PRIZM market segments, 58 P$YCLE segments, and 53 ConneXions segments, and described them by demographics and lifestyle and media traits.

Commentary

These are not stereotypes, these are consumer behaviors based on research on what people report about themselves.  These data are widely used by marketers in the US.  The underlying assumption here is that social class is reflected in consumer behaviors.  This consumer assumption about social class does not reflect social class as culture or social class as identity.


Also:

What are upper-middle class people like?

What are upper-middle-middle class people like?

What are lower-middle-middle class people like?

What are poor and lower class people like?


What are upper-middle-middle class people like?


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Work: Service, white collar, management, professional, retired

Education: high school graduate, some college, college graduate, graduate plus

Home: rent, mostly owners

Money and money management: income and assets are, moderate, above average, to high

Shop: IKEA, Bloomingdale’s, Eddie Bauer, Express, BJ’s Wholesale Club, Disney Story, buy educational toys, BarnesandNobel.com, Lands’ End, Ethan Allen Galleries, Costco, Office Depot, Gevalia Kaffe, Old Navy, Best Buy, eBay.com, BMG Music, Sherwin Williams

Read: Wired, Tennis, Consumer Reports, Details, Scouting Magazine, Parenting, Macworld, Modern Bride, Harper’s Bazaar, VFW Magazine, AARP The Magazine, Black Enterprise, American Baby, Field and Stream, People en Espanol, Daytona 500,

Watch:  The Office, The News Hour with Jim Lehrer, 24, Soccer, Gravity Games, The Sidney Channel, Discovery Health, Fox Sports Net, Maxim, MTV, BBC America, Inspiration Network, Antiques roadshow,  TeleFutura, Cartoon Network, X Games, Latin Grammy Awards, Bassmaster,

Drive: Acura TSX, Buick LaCrosse, Subaru Forester, VW Rabbit, Saturn Aura, VW Routan, VW Passat, Subaru Legacy, Nissan Xterra, Lexus LX, Mercury Grand Marquis, Chevrolet Impala, Lexus IS, Chevrolet Uplander, Chevrolet Silverado, Saturn Ion, GMC Sierra

Vacation, play, and travel:  Play racquetball, attend opera, own a timeshare, international videos, horseback riding, karate, listen to classical music, books on tape, travel by motor home, motivational tapes, attend high school sports, children’s videos, hunting,

Method

I have aggregated information from the 17 PRIZM market segments classified as Upper-Mid by Nielsen to describe the upper-middle-middle social class.  This is the upper of the three middle groups described by Nielsen.

Market segmenting makes assumptions about consumption and creates clusters of people based on their consumer characteristics, age, and on where they live.  The Nielsen Company has identified 66 PRIZM market segments, 58 P$YCLE segments, and 53 ConneXions segments, and described them by demographics and lifestyle and media traits.

Commentary

These are not stereotypes, these are consumer behaviors based on research on what people report about themselves.  These data are widely used by marketers in the US.  The underlying assumption here is that social class is reflected in consumer behaviors.  This consumer assumption about social class does not reflect social class as culture or social class as identity.


Also:

What are upper-middle class people like?

What are middle-middle class people like?

What are lower-middle-middle class people like?

What are poor and lower class people like?

New Post - The students guide to becoming upper-middle class

Friday, November 30, 2012

What are upper-middle class people like?


Will Barratt, Ph.D.

Work: Management, Executive, business owner, professional

Education: College, graduate, or professional degree

Home:  Mostly homeowners

Money and money management: Have after-tax money and retirement money to manage, real estate investments, stocks, municipal bonds, T-notes, annuities, 529s, mutual funds, a home equity line of credit, a 401k, an IRA and other types of investments.  Older UMCs will have a personal or phone relationship with a broker, financial, or wealth manager. Younger UMCs trade on line, by phone, in person, and have a personal broker, financial, or wealth manager, and an online trading account.

Shop: Expedia.com, Amazon.com, zappos.com, target.com, Saks Fifth Ave, Nordstrom, Macy’s, Bloomingdales, Lands’ End, L. L. Bean, Lord and Taylor, J. Crew, Thomasville, Neiman Marcus, Talbots, Crate and Barrel

Read: The Economist, Details, Harper’s Bazar, The New Yorker, Barron’s, Wall Street Journal, Traditional Home, Bon Appetit, Wine Spectator, Condé Nast Traveler, Architectural Digest, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, Coastal Living, Yachting, Skiing, American Hunter

Watch:  IFC, international videos, soccer, BBC America, PBS, The View, Masterpiece Theater, 60 Minutes, Saturday Night Live, Golf Channel, video on demand, pay-per-view, Ebert and Roeper, Washington Week, Bloomberg Television

Drive: Audi, VW, Lexus, Mercedes, Land Rover, Toyota Land Cruiser, Jaguar

Insurance: Have health insurance, retirement insurance, and travel insurance.

Vacation and travel: Europe, (Spain, Portugal, France), cruises, and frequent domestic travel for fun and business

Memberships: Country Club, Civic Club

Sports: Watch Horse racing, tennis, and golf, play tennis, go skiing, water skiing, and snorkeling

Method

Market segmenting makes assumptions about consumption and creates clusters of people based on their consumer characteristics, age, and on where they live.  The Nielsen Company has identified 66 PRIZM market segments, 58 P$YCLE segments, and 53 ConneXions segments, and described people in them by demographics and lifestyle and media traits.

I have aggregated information from the 14 PRIZM market segments classified as Wealthy and Upscale to describe the upper-middle social class.  This collection of 14 market segments reflects a median family income range from slightly above $100,000 a year down to $50,000.  The six wealthy market segments represent millions of US households so I  included them in the upper-middle class based on the assumption that the elite upper class are few in number.

Commentary

These are not stereotypes, these are consumer behaviors based on research on what people report about themselves.  These data are widely used by marketers in the US.  The underlying assumption here is that social class is reflected in consumer behaviors.  By looking closely it is clear that this group has money to invest and has accumulated retirement money.  This consumer assumption about social class does not reflect social class as culture or social class as identity.

Also:

What are upper-middle-middle class people like?

What are middle-middle class people like?

What are lower-middle-middle class people like?

What are poor and lower class people like?

Social class and cyborgs

Will Barratt, Ph.D.

If you are reading this you are already a cyborg, at least according to William Gibson.  You have augmented reality, peripherals, external memory, and arrays of information all at your fingertips, a mouse click or a voice command away.  Gibson outlined this idea of cyborg in his 2008 talk to the Vancouver Institute “Googling the Cyborg” (in Distrust that particular flavor).  I was taken by his idea that we don’t need to be hardwired to be a cybernetic organism.  We are not hardwired like the Borg or memory augmented like Johnny Mnemonic, but how we affect our peripherals and how they affect us is cybernetics. We can still unplug our broadband, tablet, laptop, cellphone, game console, and silicon based peripheral life.  Yet few of us unplug.

For me, the idea of the peripheral goes beyond silicon, and that is where social class comes in.  In the performance of our selves in everyday life (see Irving Goffman’s Performance of self in everyday life) we have all manner of personal identity peripherals.  People with more money will have more high quality, designer, high speed, maximum bandwidth silicon peripherals with obviously designer labeled cases.  You can get a Prada iPad case that costs more than an iPad mini.  A silicon peripheral can have a designer fashion peripheral, layering it all in complex ways.

According to Wikipedia, the most excellent source to use in this particular blog, “Cybernetics is a transdisciplinary approach for exploring regulatory systems, their structures, constraints, and possibilities.”  “A cyborg, short for "cybernetic organism", is a being with both biological and artificial (i.e. electronic, mechanical, or robotic) parts.”  Do peripherals not hard wired to you count as part of you?  Yes, according to Gibson.  You rely on sensory input (glowing screens) and physical output (typing) to use peripherals, the hard wiring is irrelevant.  If silicon-based input and output peripherals are part of our cybernetic organism selves, then our other peripherals are equally part of our cybernetic “regulatory systems, . . . structures, constraints, and possibilities”.

Our fashion and accessory peripherals help us in the performance of our gender, our ethnicity, our social class, and the myriad identities we have on public display.  Dan Ariely in The (honest) truth about dishonesty explores honesty and counterfeit fashion.  His, and others’, research tells us that knowingly wearing real high prestige designer sunglasses makes us slightly more honest and knowingly wearing counterfeit high prestige designer sunglasses makes us slightly more dishonest.  This makes knowledge about a fashion peripheral part of a person’s regulatory system, structure, constraints, and possibilities.  Sunglasses are a fashion peripheral and affect your perception of the world, as well as affect your honesty.

Cybernetic analyses is exploring regulatory systems, structures, constraints, and possibilities.  Thinking of cell phones as silicon technology peripherals makes us cybernetic organisms in a more traditional sense.  We are linked to technology is a systemic way which affects both the technology and us.   Thinking of fashion as a peripheral also makes us cyborgs, linked to our manufactured clothing and accessories which in turn affects our self-image and behaviors, which in turn affects those around us who in turn affect us.