3 resultados para Mercado Cultural


Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Este artículo es una de las ponencias presentadas en el Primer Coloquio Internacional sobre Arte Latinoamericano, Gestión Cultural y Medios de Comunicación, realizado entre los días 31 de julio y 2 de agosto del 2003, en la Facultad de Artes y Diseño, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Las relaciones entre arte y mercado configuran un tema "tabú". Este trabajo pretende echar una mirada desprejuiciada sobre la "mercancía artística" y para ello se centra en su trayectoria total, es decir en la relación tripartita de producción, circulación y consumo. Utiliza categorías de la antropología económica y de la socio-historia. Considera el caso especial de la formación cultural Mendoza de los '60, en un época considerada "esplendorosa", ya que merced a los aires modernizadores del desarrollismo, se refuerza el aparato institucional vigente que alienta las posibilidades de competir, aunque en condiciones disimétricas, en el campo nacional. A su vez analiza las relaciones mercantiles no capitalistas que establece la producción artistíca en una economía capitalista dependiente.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This paper addresses the dynamics of world wine consumption over the past 50 years in 26 countries, verifying whether or not there is a macro-tendency towards a common consumption style, despite differences in taxation, economic policies and distribution systems among countries. From an empirical point of view, the σ and β convergence hypotheses were formally tested. Model results confirm the existence of both types of convergences. Per capita consumption of wine first experienced a reduction in differences between countries and then converged toward a central value. "Traditional" countries, with historically high levels of consumption, showed a decrease in wine consumption, while emerging countries with historically lower consumption levels showed an increase. These findings not only provide further support to the theory of international convergence of wine consumption on a volume basis, as already observed by other researchers in the European market, but they also offer support for the theory in major world markets. Furthermore, convergence appears to be happening not only at a quantitative level but at qualitative level as well, and this phenomenon may very well reflect the changing tastes of worldwide consumers towards a generalized structure of wine consumption.