Fashion and art cycles are driven by counter-dominance signals of elite competition: quantitative evidence from music styles
Peter Klimek, Robert Kreuzbauer, Stefan Thurner

TL;DR
This study uses a large dataset of music albums to quantitatively analyze how fashion and art cycles are driven by counter-dominance signals from peripheral groups challenging elites, rather than solely top-down or random processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel network-based method to empirically test theories of style cycle dynamics, providing evidence for counter-dominance signaling as a key driver.
Findings
Counter-dominance signaling significantly influences style changes
Empirical evidence challenges purely top-down or bottom-up theories
Data-driven approach clarifies social dynamics of fashion cycles
Abstract
Human symbol systems such as art and fashion styles emerge from complex social processes that govern the continuous re-organization of modern societies. They provide a signaling scheme that allows members of an elite to distinguish themselves from the rest of society. Efforts to understand the dynamics of art and fashion cycles have been based on 'bottom-up' and 'top down' theories. According to 'top down' theories, elite members signal their superior status by introducing new symbols (e.g., fashion styles), which are adopted by low-status groups. In response to this adoption, elite members would need to introduce new symbols to signal their status. According to many 'bottom-up' theories, style cycles evolve from lower classes and follow an essentially random pattern. We propose an alternative explanation based on counter-dominance signaling. There, elite members want others to imitate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial and Cultural Dynamics · Aesthetic Perception and Analysis · Fashion and Cultural Textiles
