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Jun 22, 2021 · Western societies in 2021 are no longer experiencing merely a culture war, says Davison Hunter, but rather “a kind of class-culture conflict”, with cultural divisions mapping onto economic ones.
- The Public Tend to See Divisions and Culture Wars as Exaggerated
- But That Doesn’T Mean They Think Such Tensions Aren’T Real
- Political Divides: Who Sticks to Their Own Bubble?
77% of people agree that the media often makes the country feel more divided than it really is, including 33% who strongly agree.44% think politicians invent or exaggerate culture wars as a political tactic, while 35% neither agree nor disagree, and only 10% disagree.Half the country (51%) think the UK is currently the most divided it’s been during their lifetime – but a similar proportion (44%) have a less negative view. This includes 30% of the public who say...44% think culture wars are a serious problem for UK society and politics, although 34% neither agree nor disagree that this is the case.Labour supporters (30%) are nearly twice as likely as Conservatives (16%) to say most of the people they interact with online share their political views. And this isn’t just because Labour supporters are more likely to use social media – a similar pattern can be seen when looking only at supporters of both parties who use social media on a daily b...
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May 20, 2021 · But, today, as that conflict has grown, “instead of just culture wars, there’s now a kind of class-culture conflict” that has moved beyond the simple boundaries of religiosity.
Jan 21, 2023 · If class is a matter of a person’s location in an economic structure — whether, say, they own means of production or must sell their labor for a living — then class has little predictive power in explaining why people do what they do, culturalists argue.
The US comes top for perceived tension between different ethnicities, with 83% believing there is a great deal or fair amount. South Africa, where 79% feel this way, comes second. People in Japan (26%) and China (31%) are least likely to perceive such tensions.
May 5, 2021 · When it comes to key cultural issues, Americans are significantly more divided along ideological lines than people in the United Kingdom, France and Germany, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of surveys conducted in the four countries in fall 2020.
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Oct 8, 2014 · This article examines the “culture war” hypothesis by focusing on American citizens’ choices among a set of core values. A geometric model is developed to represent differences in the ways that individuals rank-order seven important values: freedom, equality, economic security, social order, morality, individualism, and patriotism.