Maureen Waller’s research while affiliated with Princeton University and other places

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Publications (1)


Table 2 Unstandardized coefficients for regressions of structural position, geographic variables on moral boundary items: 1993 General Social Survey location, and lifestyle enclave
Table 4 (continued)
Cultural and Moral Boundaries in the United States: Structural Position, Geographic Location, and Lifestyle Explanations
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 1996

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990 Reads

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85 Citations

Poetics

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John Schmalzbauer

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Maureen Waller

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Daniel Weber

Using the culture module of the 1993 General Social Survey, this study proposes a multicausal model to assess the determinants of moral and cultural boundaries in the American population. We find that structural position - education, income, class, and gender - affects the likelihood that individuals draw one type of boundary rather than another. Furthermore, geographic location and participation in lifestyle clusters play an important role in supplying cultural repertoires that affect the drawing of boundaries. While both cultural and moral boundaries are predicted by structural position and geographic location, cultural boundaries are predicted by participation in high culture lifestyle clusters and moral boundaries are predicted by participation in religious lifestyle clusters. Geographic location and participation in lifestyle clusters have a stronger effect on the boundaries of non-college graduates than on those of college graduates, suggesting that local cultural repertoires have a less important impact on the boundaries of individuals who share a homogenizing educational experience.

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Citations (1)


... These boundaries are divided into three types: cultural (based on education, manners, and cultural practices), socio-economic (based on wealth and professional success), and moral (based on honesty, solidarity, and consideration for others). Moral boundaries are particularly significant for our research as they encompass political (Sivonen and Heikkilä, 2024) and religious (Lamont et al., 1996) values, thus allowing us to interrogate the roles of morality and culture in the appreciation of conservative art. While the boundary approach is primarily used to understand how people categorise others, these evaluative frameworks are also applied to include and exclude cultural objects. ...

Reference:

How do Conservative and Islamic Art Audiences Define Good Taste? Cultural Classifications at the Crossroads of Morality, Religion, and Politics in Turkey
Cultural and Moral Boundaries in the United States: Structural Position, Geographic Location, and Lifestyle Explanations

Poetics