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Hegemonic and Polemical Beliefs: Culture and Consumption in the Social Representation of Wine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2013

Grégory Lo Monaco*
Affiliation:
Université de Provence Aix-Marseille I (France)
Christian Guimelli
Affiliation:
Université de Provence Aix-Marseille I (France)
*
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Grégory Lo Monaco. Université de Provence. Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale. 13621 Aix-en-Provence Cedex 1. (France). Phone: +33-667450269. E-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

Wine, in France, is a cultural product. However, the issue of wine consumption has been at the centre of a recurring social debate. We decided to focus our study on the effect of consumption practices on this social representation as well as the variations in position-taking in very different normative contexts. Results revealed two distinct social representations according to consumption practice. Moreover, Guttman effect in principal component analysis uncovered a unique phenomenon which showed that participants (consumer vs. non consumer) were inclined to act differently only in the case of polemical issues when they perceived the investigator as a consumer vs. non consumer. Indeed, in the case of hegemonic beliefs they were inclined to act in the same way and their answers were not influenced by the status of the investigator. Results are discussed around the question of the links between social representations and social identity.

El vino, en Francia, es un producto cultural. No obstante, el tema del consumo de vino ha sido el centro de un debate social recurrente. Nosotros decidimos centrar nuestro estudio en los efectos de las prácticas de consumo en esta representación social así como en las variaciones de posturas en diferentes contextos normativos. Los resultados revelan dos representaciones sociales distintas de acuerdo a las prácticas de consumo. Aún más, el efecto Guttman en el análisis de componentes principales descubrió un fenómeno único que muestra que los participantes (consumidor vs. no consumidor) se inclinaron a comportarse de manera diferente dependiendo de si percibían al experimentador como consumidor vs. no consumidor respecto a aspectos polémicos, y no, con respecto a creencias hegemónicas. Los resultados se discuten en torno a la cuestión de los nexos entre las representaciones sociales y la identidad social.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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