Cultural Capital and Cultural Diversity

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    Journal of Australian Studies 32:4 (December 2008); 509-20

    Cultural capital and cultural diversity: some problems in

    Ghassan Hages account of cosmopolitan multiculturalism

    Scott Brook

    Abstract

    Ghassan Hages account of Australian cosmopolitan multiculturalism provided

    an exemplary class critique of multiculturalism policy under the labor Hawke-

    Keating governments (1983-1996), one which highlighted the fault lines along

    which a popular backlash against multiculturalism later developed. However,

    upon closer inspection the theoretical and ethnographic work behind the cosmo-

    multiculturalist thesis appears seriously flawed. This article revisits Hages mid-

    1990s ethnography on Vietnamese restaurants in Cabramatta, a suburb in

    Sydneys south-west that has a significant number of Indo-Chinese residents and

    businesses and is promoted by local government as Australias most

    multicultural suburb. It argues Hages ethnography not only distorts the causality

    of local tourism, but is unable to appreciate the mixed governmental rationales

    that underpin local planning and the active participation of migrant associations in

    this process. Furthermore, it is argued Hages notion of cosmopolitan capital is

    insufficiently Bourdieusian as it assumes the domination effects of cultural capital

    are due to the commodity relations it enables, rather than being a consequence

    of its unequal distribution and (therefore) its capacity to realise class-specific

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    social advantages. A brief review of one recent attempt to operationalise Hages

    critique in Australian broadcasting policy further supports the conclusion that the

    cosmo-multiculturalist thesis as it currently stands has limited value as an

    explanatory tool and point of policy intervention.

    Australian Multiculturalism after Labor

    In Ghassan Hages various critiques of Australian multiculturalism the term

    multiculturalism slides across levels of analysis, reflecting not only the different

    domains of government policy in which questions of an ethnically diverse polity

    are at stake, but also the different methodologies Hage has employed. Moving

    between ethnographies based on participant observation and interviews, to

    textual analysis of the rhetoric of media commentators, academics, politicians

    and policy documents, Hages work is a strong example of cultural criticism; a

    genre whose mix of ethical and political engagement, diverse intellectual

    resources and popular pedagogy often sustains the role of public intellectual.1

    Despite this eclecticism a central and arguably defining feature of Hages

    methodology has been that questions of cultural diversity, whether at the level of

    policy or everyday practice, are approached in relation to questions of class.

    Hage regularly achieves this by constructing two sites of multicultural practice

    one working class, the other middle classthat are taken as exemplary of two

    1Ghassan Hage is currently listed at number eighteen on the Australian Public Intellectuals (API) Network

    Top Forty list. Available on-line at http://www.api-network.com/main/index.php?apply=&webpage=

    default&cID=16&PHPSESSID=&menuID=50 [Accessed 1/6/2008]

    http://www.api-network.com/main/index.php?apply=&webpage=default&cID=16&PHPSESSIDhttp://www.api-network.com/main/index.php?apply=&webpage=default&cID=16&PHPSESSID
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    competing policy priorities. For instance, in the book chapter The class

    aesthetics of global multiculturalism Hage contrasts an aestheticised global

    multiculturalism of the mobile professional and managerial classes, against the

    localised, nation-State orientated multiculturalism of working class migrants.2

    Expressed as a conflict of competing ethical imperatives, we might say the

    multiculturalism of cultural desire is here pitted against the multiculturalism of

    cultural survival. For a book with the subtitle searching for hope in a shrinking

    society, and a rhetorical style that strongly testifies to this ambition, the prospect

    in this chapter is rather gloomy. As an aestheticised global multiculturalism of

    cosmopolitan consumption replaces the multiculturalism of migrants rights vis -a-

    vis the nation state, Hage argues, the value of a culturally diverse polity from the

    point of view of government is reduced to place-marketing. Vocalising the

    agenda of global multiculturalism thus, Hage writes;

    [E]very government around the world can be heard begging,

    Please come here Mr Transcendental Capital, please invest here in my

    very multicultural zoo-like city, where all kinds of safe and

    domesticated otherness is available for consumption. []

    I can provide your multicultural workers with the [] grooviest coffee

    shops you can imagine, equipped with the latest Italian coffee-

    machines, the best baristas and the best macchiatos. I will

    offer them the most culturally diverse culinary scene possible[.]3

    2Ghassan Hage,Against Paranoid Nationalism: Searching for hope in a shrinking society, Pluto Press,

    Annandale, NSW, 2003, 108-19.

    3Hage,Against Paranoid Nationalism: Searching for hope in a shrinking society, 110-11

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    Although clearly polemical, Hages argument is anticipated by empirical research

    from the mid-1990s on Australian state-sponsored policies of multiculturalism

    under the Hawke and Keating governments (1983-1996). Refusing to accept

    Labors policies and programs of multiculturalism at face valueie. in terms of a

    narrative of developmental progress in which enlightened values of inclusive

    diversity finally triumph over policies of assimilation and racially selective

    migrationHage sought to highlight the less benign motives behind the pick-up

    of the term by a government committed to wide scale economic reform. Taking

    his cue from the use of the term cosmopolitanism interchangeably with

    multiculturalism in the 1988 federal government report, Immigration: a

    Commitment to Australia, otherwise known as the Fitzgerald Inquiry4, and

    drawing on his earlier critique of the settler-colonial inheritances of multicultural

    policy as a continuing governmental discourse for managing non-Anglo-Celtic

    communities, or zoology5, Hage coined the neologism cosmo-multiculturalism

    to describe a policy moment in which Australians where inculcated within a

    celebratory and consumer relation to signifiers of ethnic authenticity. Unlike the

    earlier welfare policy moment of the 1970s,6 cosmo-multiculturalism under the

    late Hawke and Keating Labor governments had little to do with the needs of an

    ethnically diverse polity, and even less with the symbolic work of home building

    4Ghassan Hage, Anglo-Celtics Today: Cosmo-multiculturalism and the phase of the fading phallus,

    Communal/Plural, no. 4, 1996, 41-77, 63. Ghassan Hage, At home in the entrails of the west in Helen

    Grace, Ghassan Hage, Leslie Johnson, Julie Langsworth and Michael SymondsHome/world: Space,

    community and marginality in Sydneys west, Pluto Press, Annandale, NSW, 99-153, 150-51n33.

    5Ghassan Hage, Republicanism, Multiculturalism, Zoology, Communal/Plural, no. 2, 1994, 113-37.

    6Hage,Against Paranoid Nationalism: Searching for hope in a shrinking society, 58-60.

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    in migrant communities, but rather centralised a middle-class tourist subject for

    whom public displays of taste for ethnic difference evidence a form of

    cosmopolitan capital, a subset of cultural capital.7 Drawing on the critique of

    cultural taste developed by the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu,8 Hage suggested that

    the function of a cultivated taste for ethnic diversity resided in the cosmo-

    multiculturalists public display of social distance, or distinction, from those who

    lack such good taste, and that such class practices could be redeemed as

    representing the national interest. Although his ethnographic work in various

    suburbs of Sydney focused on the consumption of ethnic cuisine, this thesis was

    not limited to food. It could include fashion, travel, music, filmin fact any activity

    in which a consumer seeks an experience of authentic ethnic difference.

    Considered loosely as a policy moment, cosmo-multiculturalism

    represented a more radical embrace of cultural difference than the earlier welfare

    policy moment, yet it put this embrace in the service of a new national self-image

    and a new national economy. Hages account therefore dovetailed well with the

    policy contexts of both the 1989 Garnaut Report, Australia and the Northeast

    Asian Ascendancy,9 as well as the touting of international and domestic tourism

    during the 1980s as a solution to what Australians were being taught was their

    7Hage, Anglo-Celtics Today: Cosmo-multiculturalism and the phase of the fading phallus, 64.

    8 Pierre Bourdieu,Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, translated by Richard Nice,

    Harvard University Press, Cambridge & Massachusetts, 1984.

    9Ross Garnaut,Australia and the Northeast Asian Ascendancy: Report to the Prime Minister and the

    Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Commonwealth Government of Australia, Canberra, 1989.

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    vulnerable national economy; a moment Graham Turner has described as the

    improbable enclosure of tourism within a national commercial project.10

    In retrospect it is clear Hages account provided a strong account of what

    went wrong with the image of multiculturalism. If the yoking together of

    multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism enabled relations between Anglo-Celtic

    and non-Anglo-Celtic Australians that were seriously patronising, Hage

    demonstrated how this move simultaneously provided the terms on which

    multiculturalism might be popularly perceived as elitist. Of course, Hage wasnt

    alone in drawing attention to this. Sociologist Nancy Viviani would write in 1996

    that [t]he stress on cultural diversity at the expense of the concern with equality

    [] helped fuel the backlash against multiculturalism.11 Hages account,

    however, provided a history and theory of the public spaces in which such elitism

    was performed. During the 1980s and 1990s there was no shortage of articulate

    liberal critics of popular anti-multiculturalism in the Australian media who were

    willing to testify how cultural diversity was good for the nation, and how culturally

    backward opponents of multiculturalism were: yet few of these critics paused to

    consider how their rhetoric merged multiculturalism with globalisation, the forms

    of class power their own position signaled in the media, or how their own morally

    exemplary performances helped fuel popular resentments against multicultural

    10 Graeme Turner,Making it National: Nationalism and Popular Australian Culture, Allen & Unwin,

    Sydney, 1994, 111.

    11Nancy Viviani, The Indochinese in Australia 1975-1995: From Burnt Boats to Barbecues, Oxford

    University Press, Oxford, 1996, 148.

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    elites that culminated in a spectacular backlash, as Meaghan Morris has

    suggested.12

    If Hages thesis on cosmopolitan multiculturalism has become an efficient

    means of accounting for the demise of bipartisan support for multiculturalism

    during this period, then I want to suggest its utility for policy is less

    straightforward. However, before considering the way in which Hages account

    has been negotiated in an example of recent cultural policy, I want to focus in

    detail on Hages ethnography on cosmopolitan visitors to the suburb of

    Cabramatta.

    13

    This fieldwork was a key exhibit in the development of the cosmo-

    multiculturalism thesis, one that sought to show how government policy was

    thoroughly aligned with middle-class practices of social distinction. Although

    Hages account of these visitors as seekers of cosmopolitan distinction is entirely

    plausible, I suggest it is under-developed is so far as Hages research does not

    demonstrate how such practices accumulate social advantages that are

    unavailable to those who lack cosmopolitan capital, but focuses instead on the

    point of exchange between cosmopolitan tourists and their hosts. This relation is

    presented as being between consumers and feeders of cultural difference, a

    situation in which the value of ethnic culture shifts from being a source of home-

    building for migrant communities, to that of a commodity for non -migrant

    Australians.14 Hages fieldwork is further problematic in so far as it does not

    consider the well documented fact that local government in Cabramatta has

    12Meaghan Morris, `Please explain? ignorance, poverty and the past,Inter-Asia Cultural Studies,1:2,

    2000, 219-32.

    13Hage, At home in the entrails of the west.

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    drawn upon Indochinese cultural identity as a resource in numerous tourism-

    orientated projects in cultural and urban planning, projects that have involved a

    range of stakeholders in pursuit of an equally diverse number of goals. I suggest

    Hages complete exclusion ofany reference to this history of policy development

    implies not only a moral resistance to the notion that culture might form such a

    resource, but an inability to appreciate the more mundane and routine objectives

    of those government programs for which questions of an ethnically diverse polity

    are at stake. In the face of this, Hages research on the pursuit of cosmopolitan

    capital in Cabramatta appears not so much orientated by the goal of

    demonstrating its role in the reproduction of social advantages by and for a

    specific social class; rather, it appears to be orientated by the goal of

    demonstrating a commodity relation in which culture is alienated from its morally

    superior function of home-building. To this end, I argue, Hages, applied theory

    of cosmopolitan capital is distinctly different to Bourdieus theory of cultural

    capital.15

    In search of the cosmo-multiculturalists

    Cabramatta is a suburb with high levels of ethnic and linguistic diversity in the

    Local Government Area of Fairfield in Sydneys south west. Cabramatta also has

    a significant concentration of Indochinese Australian residents, community

    organisations and businesses whose presence has been rendered publicly

    14Hage, At home in the entrails of the west, 140.

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    visible due to both regular moral panics in the media during the 1980s and 1990s

    associated with drugs and Asian gangs, as well as vigorous urban tourism

    initiatives since the 1980s which continue today with the promotional tag:

    Discover Cabramatta: A Taste of Asia. Fairfield City Council invests a great deal

    of effort in promoting the cultural diversity of the area, and boasts Cabramatta on

    its website as the most multicultural suburb in Australia.16

    In Hages discussion of his fieldwork Cabramatta functions as a mediating

    point between the middle-class, consumerist and predominantly Anglo-Celtic

    multiculturalism of inner city Sydney, and the multiculturalism of everyday

    migrant home-making in Sydneys western and south-western suburbs.17 Playing

    these two lived relations to cultural diversity off against each otherone

    cosmopolitan, the other migrant; one centred on cultural consumption, the other

    on cultural maintenanceHage used his research on Cabramattas Vietnamese

    restaurants to show how inner-city cosmo-multiculturalists dont simply denigrate

    the south-western suburbs as less multicultural (read: cosmopolitan) than they

    are, despite the fact that more migrant Australians live there, but also, and even

    more perversely, travel to the south-western suburbs to enjoy authentic ethnic

    cuisine. In the case of Cabramatta, the interviews were with local restaurant

    patrons, patrons who traveled to Cabramatta from Sydneys inner suburbs for its

    15I should point out my comments are restricted to a reading of the notion of cosmopolitan capital and do

    not attempt to cover Hages much broader concept of national capital as developed in White Nation:

    Fantasies of White supremacy in a multicultural society, Pluto Press, Annandale NSW, 1998.

    16Fairfield City Council,http://wwwfairfield.nsw.gov.au[Accessed 1/6/2008].

    17Hage, At home in the entrails of the west.

    http://wwwfairfield.nsw.gov.au/http://wwwfairfield.nsw.gov.au/http://wwwfairfield.nsw.gov.au/http://wwwfairfield.nsw.gov.au/
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    perceived authentic Vietnamese cuisine, as well as the staff and owners of the

    Vietnamese restaurants studied.

    Hages account however is problematic for two reasons. The first is

    empirical. The Cabramatta fieldwork was limited to interviews concerning the

    behaviour and interactions of restaurant customers and their hosts and therefore

    didnt consider the history of urban planning and municipal promotion in Fairfield,

    nor the distinct local rationales for these projects. This leads to a serious error in

    Hages account of the history of local tourism and the agency of local businesses

    and community organisations in this process. Although Hage acknowledges the

    tactics of Vietnamese restaurant owners in attracting their cosmopolitan patrons,

    the development of Cabramatta as a tourist destination is represented as an

    effect of the desireof tourist-consumers, rather than the managed result of town

    planning. Hage argues Cabramatta is not cosmo-multicultural by design

    Cabramatta, like any good Third World tourist spot outside of the touristic circuit,

    was discovered by the adventurers of the centre playing the colonial explorer

    game.18 However, apart from the claims made by the Cabramatta culinary

    tourists he interviews, Hage puts forward no evidence of this. Furthermore, his

    conclusion is in stark contrast to the history of Cabramatta tourism presented by

    cultural geographer Kevin Dunn.19 Dunn notes that from the late 1980s domestic

    18Hage, At home in the entrails of the west, 143.

    19Kevin M. Dunn, The Vietnamese concentration in Cabramatta: site of avoidance and deprivation, or

    island of adjustment and participation?,Australian Geographical Studies 31:2, 1993; 228-45. Kevin M.

    Dunn, Rethinking ethnic concentration: the case of Cabramatta, Sydney, Urban Studies, 35:3, March

    1998, 503-25. Kevin M. Dunn, Using cultural geography to engage contested constructions of ethnicity

    and citizenship in Sydney, Social & Cultural Geography, 4:2, 2003, 153-65.

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    tourism has been touted by a range of local agents as a way of combining a

    positive image campaign with local economic development, as well as a form of

    place-making that has significance for local migrant communities.20 Such place-

    making projects have been founded on the hope that negative press associating

    the area with crime and drugs21which Cabramatta locals, reportedly, regarded

    as a significant contributor to the local drug trade through attracting heroin

    users22will be replaced by tourists and shoppers.

    In the mid-1980s local businesses and cultural associations formed the

    Cabramatta Pai Lau Beautification Association which from 1986 onwards was

    responsible for organising annual Lunar New Year festivities. This group

    organised the construction of the Pai Lau gatewaythe centerpiece of Freedom

    Plaza in Cabramattas central business districtas well as numerous stone

    sculptures of animals from the Chinese zodiac. Freedom Plaza in the heart of

    Cabramattas CBD incorporates multiple functions, including street-beautification,

    community-based heritage, tourist attraction, and most recently, CCT

    surveillance. Completed in 1989 and funded by numerous business and

    community groups both locally and throughout New South Wales, including

    Chinese, Vietnamese, Lao and Khmer community associations, and the

    government of Taiwan, the heritage listed Pai Lau gateway was builtaccording

    to Fairfields heritage audio touras a symbol of harmony and multiculturalism,

    20Dunn, Rethinking ethnic concentration: the case of Cabramatta, Sydney.

    21Peter Teo, Racism in the news: a critical discourse analysis of news reporting in two Australian news

    papers,Discourse and Society, 11:1, 2000, 7-49.

    22Christopher Kremmer, Generation V, Sydney Morning Herald, 30 April 2005.

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    and, above all, as a monument to democracy and freedom.23 Bold letters spell

    out the words liberty and democracy in Chinese, Vietnamese, Khmer, Lao and

    English. The regional political significance of these words is deliberate. The tour

    notes the gate was also designed to challenge popular perceptions that Chinese

    and Indochinese refugees had come to Australia as economic refugees. In the

    early 1990s Dunn interviewed many of the office bearers of the Pai Lau

    association and notes they

    revealed an awareness of the strategic nature of these icons.

    The secretary of the Association commented that they were overt

    attempts to compete with Chinatown in inner Sydney, and that these

    were public relations and tourism-orientated initiatives.24

    Such urban developments accompanied the Cabramatta Tourist Associations

    promotion of Cabramatta during the late 1980s with pamphlets and bumper

    stickers with titles such as Visit the new face of Cabramatta, and slogans such

    as Cabramatta: where East meets West. 1990s tourism initiatives pursued or

    supported by Fairfield City Council have included commissioned documentaries,

    virtual tours on compact disc, and food tours. Dunn notes that [l]ike the

    beautification works, these public relations initiatives have a ring of Orientalism

    23'Tune in to Fairfield: a multicultural driving tour, produced by Fairfield City Council in partnership with

    the Migration Heritage Centre and Premiers Department NSW. Audio tour notes available at

    http://www.fairfieldcity.nsw.gov.au/default.asp?iDocID=6771&iNavCatID=213&iSubCatID=2258

    [Accessed 5/10/2007]

    24Dunn, Using cultural geography to engage contested constructions of ethnicity and citizenship in

    Sydney, 160.

    http://www.fairfieldcity.nsw.gov.au/default.asp?i%20DocID=6771&iNavCatID=213&iSubCatID=2258http://www.fairfieldcity.nsw.gov.au/default.asp?i%20DocID=6771&iNavCatID=213&iSubCatID=2258http://www.fairfieldcity.nsw.gov.au/default.asp?i%20DocID=6771&iNavCatID=213&iSubCatID=2258
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    about them, constructing the suburb as the Exotic East.25 He also suggests that

    however much economically motivated, these positive stereotypes were

    strategic political devices in the representational battles faced by these

    communities.26 Dunn also notes, however, that there were many agents and

    agendas involved, and that the Asia-themed promotions of Cabramatta were

    often pursued by Fairfield City Council beyond the initiatives of community

    groups and associations.27

    I do not draw attention to this history in order to claim such urban and

    cultural planning projects have been successful in terms of their objectives, or

    that the effects of such orientalist strategies are benign. However, I do suggest

    they too constitute the field in which cosmopolitan practices are played-out, and

    that their local policy rationales cannot be read-off from the broader cosmo-

    multiculturalist thesis. In ignoring the role of tourism in urban planning, Hage

    overlooks the specific context in which local tourism was touted as a solution to a

    range of problems, and, therefore, the extra-economic uses to which culture

    was being put. While these are not the immediate topic of Hages ethnography,

    their complete exclusion from Hages account does suggest a substantial

    resistance to the notion migrant culture might be linked to the commodity

    relations of tourism. For his part, Dunns research sought to develop a case

    against governmental migrant resettlement policies that pathologised ethnic

    25Dunn, Using cultural geography to engage contested constructions of ethnicity and citizenship in

    Sydney, 160.

    26Dunn, Using cultural geography to engage contested constructions of ethnicity and citizenship in

    Sydney, 160.

    27Dunn, Rethinking ethnic concentration: the case of Cabramatta, Sydney, 13.

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    concentrations, policies which Dunn shows had during the 1980s developed

    migrant dispersion programs in order to assuage popular majority fears of

    unassimilated ethnic ghettos. Dunns work sought to produce empirical evidence

    that sites of ethnic concentration, such as Cabramatta, were beneficial to migrant

    resettlement and by no means prevented migrant communities from broader

    social participation, including, crucially, economic participation.28

    That Hage cannot consider tourism affirmatively relates to a second and

    far more serious problem, which concerns his use of the concept of cultural

    capital. For unlike Pierre Bourdieus account, Hage does not leave room for

    thinking cosmopolitan cultural capital affirmatively. For Hage, cosmopolitan

    capital (which he also glosses as touristic capital29) is problematic in and of itself

    as it sustains a market for ethnic culture. According to Bourdieus most

    programmatic statement, embodied cultural capital at a basic level is an index of

    a persons capacities that have been built-up by various forms of implicit and

    explicit training, beginning with the family, extending through education and into

    the domain of everyday consumption.30 Such capacities might reflect highly

    institutionalised practicessuch as the ability to play a musical instrumentor

    more subtle forms of sensibility, such as knowing what to talk about across a

    wide range of social contexts. Cultural capital brings advantages to its holders as

    it is the basis of further acquisition of cultural capital (for instance, through the

    28Dunn, The Vietnamese concentration in Cabramatta: site of avoidance and deprivation, or island of

    adjustment and participation?.

    29Hage, At home in the entrails of the west, 101.

    30 Pierre Bourdieu, The Forms of Capital, in John G.Richardson (ed.), Handbook of Theory and Research

    for the Sociology of Education, New York, Greenwood Press, 1986, 241-258.

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    education system) and can also be converted into symbolic capital (recognition),

    social capital (social contacts and networks) and economic capital (financial

    capital). And it is because cultural capital is unequally distributed that it can cater

    for games of distinction that assist in the reproduction of social class. To follow

    Bourdieu, however, would be to maintain the possibility that cultural capital can

    be, and in the words of Tony Bennett, withdrawn from the game of distinction,

    through an intervention in its distribution.31 For Bourdieu this was best achieved

    through state education. To give an example: that some Australians might use

    their capacity to appreciate high cultural forms to produce social distance from

    people from other social classes who do not have this capacity was not to be

    countered by overturning the scales of cultural legitimacy upon which they were

    erected (so that, for instance, arts funding bodies might regard Heavy Metal

    music as equally worthy of funding as chamber music). Rather, for Bourdieu, this

    situation was to be addressed by expanding public education so that everyone

    might possess the means of appropriating those cultural fields, such as classical

    music, that had achieved aesthetic autonomy and thereby could support the

    cultivated practice of disinterested taste. Of course, Bourdieus solution raises its

    own problems, not least concerning its assumptions concerning the universal

    value of European aesthetic culture.32In any case, Hages use of cultural capital

    31Tony Bennett, Cultural Capital and Inequality: Refining the Policy Calculus, Cultural Trends, 15:2/3,

    2006, 239-44, 240.

    32 My reading of Bourdieu here has been greatly assisted by Tony Bennetts recent essay that dispels the

    myth that Bourdieu was a cultural relativist. See Tony Bennett, The historical universal: the role of

    cultural value in the historical sociology of Pierre Bourdieu, The British Journal of Sociology 56:1, 2005,

    141-64.

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    here is clearly different from Bourdieus. It does not attempt to clear a space in

    which to consider how the class-specific practices of cosmopolitans are an index

    of unequally distributed capacities that could be inculcated in the general

    population, as a form of multicultural citizenship education in schools, for

    example. Rather, Hage stakes out opposition to the idea that multicultural policy

    might work with the kinds of market exchanges that permit the cosmopolitans

    tourist itinerary in the first place. Furthermore, it is not that economic exchanges

    are insufficient as a means of mediating the process by which the general

    population experiences itself as a culturally diverse polity (which is a plausible

    critique of those forms of neo-liberal ideology that aspire to delete any role for

    government beyond economic management). Rather, Hage takes up the far less

    negotiable position that economic exchanges fundamentally compromise cultural

    diversity policy through sustaining relations between consumers and feeders of

    cultural difference.33

    Let me summarise the argument so far. I am not here contesting Hages

    research that shows cosmopolitan visitors to Cabramatta make claims to social

    distinction, nor that their imagined experience of discovering Cabramatta is

    central to these claims. These research findings can both be upheld. I am

    suggesting Hages research on cosmopolitan capital is insufficiently Bourdieusian

    as it (1) does not demonstrate the domination effects of these claims to

    distinction, which would require research on the forms of social advantage that

    accrue to holders of cosmopolitan capital on the basis of these claims, and (2)

    33Hage, At home in the entrails of the west, 140.

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    cannot consider cosmopolitan capital neutrally as a capacitythat only becomes a

    source of distinction due to its unequal distribution. For Hage, cosmopolitan

    capital is not problematic because it delivers social advantages to its holders that

    are unavailable to others due to its restricted circulation (which Hages research

    does not seek to demonstrate); rather, cosmopolitan capital is problematic

    because it reproduces a market relation between cosmopolitan consumers and

    ethnic feeders (which Hages research does demonstrate), a relation in which

    culture becomes a commodity at the expense of its more morally acceptable

    function of home-building.

    34

    Considered as a form of tourism critique,Hages account hence becomes

    an easy target for a classic study in tourism studies, namely Dean MacCannells

    The Tourist: a new theory of the leisure class.35 For MacCannell, the modern

    tourist is a deeply ambivalent figure. While their attempt to experience authentic

    34I must thank an anonymous reader of an earlier version of this paper for both an extended critical

    response to my discussion of Cabramatta tourism and a spirited defence of Hages research there. These

    have encouraged me to clarify the limits of my argument and more fully acknowledge those findings of

    Hages research that are outside its scope. However, this reader emphasised a central objection that I cannot

    accept; namely, that I rely on secondary sources and report no ethnographic findings of my own. Of course,

    it is beyond dispute that fieldwork is crucial to the advance of research on cultural diversity and cultural

    capital. However, as a criterion by which to assess the worthiness of contributions to debates in this area,

    this criticism would imply methodological discussions have no validity of their own and/or can only be

    broached when the speaker has cultivated the authority that comes with fieldwork. This not only diminishes

    the possibility research might be accumulative and divided between specialised functions, but appears to

    attribute a special status to ethnography as of higher cognitive value than those more bureau-based (dare I

    say bureaucratic) modes of intellectual work, such as paying close attention to the details of published

    reports and applied methodology, as well as raising questions of how research findings are coordinated

    with the action of government agencies.

    35Dean MacCannell, The Tourist: a new theory of the Leisure Class, Schocken Books, New York, 1989,

    [1976].

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    difference places them at the vanguard of many of the negative effects of

    Modernity, the motivation for this quest is not an appetite for social distinction,

    but rather the quintessentially Modern need to recuperate the disorientating and

    alienating experience of limitless social differentiation for a sense of the world as

    fundamentally explicable. In this the tourists search for knowledge both

    prefigures the social sciences, including anthropology, as well as holds out the

    potential that the practices of tourism can be redeployed as community

    planning. It is for this reason MacCannell claims [t]he modern critique of tourists

    [ie. anti-tourism] is not an analytic reflection on the problem of tourismit is part

    of the problem.36 Indeed, the only way of interrupting the touristic desire for

    authenticity is to stop regarding tourism as an inauthentic relation that needs to

    be transcended. MacCannells argument here would focus on how Hages

    technique of contrasting the tourists experience of commoditised cultural

    difference with the domestic scene of migrant homemaking is itself anticipated by

    the very same desire for authenticity, and the very same desire to escape the

    scene of social planning, that motivates the cosmopolitans he studies.

    Accordingly, one can hear a nascent form of Hages critique in the statements of

    one Cabramatta restaurant customer he quotes. A professional from inner

    Sydney who was interviewed for the research on why he travelled to Cabramatta

    for its restaurants, states;

    I would like to see perhaps a lot less meat in traditionally non-meat

    cultures such as Indian and Japanese, so that instead of presenting

    36MacCannell, The Tourist: a new theory of the Leisure Class, 10.

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    us with Australianised food they actually present the real food, and Id

    like to see it divorced from the concept of multiculturalism a little more

    and presented as a community activity by ethnic communities feeding

    themselves rather than as something that Australians can cash in on.

    Exploited labour as making food for us.37

    Here we can see the cosmo-multiculturalist in all their glory; freely providing the

    anthropologist with their wish-list of authentic ethnic cuisine. This statement is

    clearly strong evidence in support of Hages account. Regarding the second half

    of the quotation however, we also have to consider the possibility that this

    interviewee would entirely agree with Hages thesis on cosmo-multiculturalism

    and in fact shares the value Hage places on those forms of migrant home-

    making that are not orientated towards the Other in a commercial exchange

    (exploited labour) or associated with a government policy (multiculturalism).

    Indeed, Im not sure its possible here to separate Hages moral critique from that

    of the interviewed subject, except for the fact that the interviewee is speaking in

    the context of being asked to reflect on their tastes in restaurant cuisine, and

    Hage, the anthropologist-critic, is not.

    Cosmopolitanism and cultural policy

    Of course, there is nothing wrong about opposing the use of culture as an

    economic resource on grounds of moral or political principle. However, the

    practical limitation of this position is that it cannot appreciate the mixed agendas

    37Hage, At home in the entrails of the west, 140. Emphasis added.

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    and domains of local government, such as urban and cultural planning, which

    routinely factor in the priorities of local economies and are fairly impervious to

    reflex condemnations of this. Opposition to the idea culture might be viewed as

    a resource not only prevents critics from attending to the details of governmental

    reform or identifying points where engagement is possible, but also detracts

    attention from the varied agendas of non-government agents who make use of

    this terrain. Given this, it would appear to restrict discussion to a mode of political

    critique whose main rhetorical effect would be moral denunciation.

    A neat conclusion here would be to suggest, following Ian Hunter, that the

    practical site of application for Hages critique would be the classroom, where the

    idea and ideal of culture as a whole way of life works as a pedagogic tool

    through which students might problematise their relations to cultural diversity as

    a form of ethical training.38 Considered thus, the instrumental value of Hages

    critique of cosmo-multiculturalism would be pedagogic rather than cognitive in so

    far as it enables the moral value of different uses of culture to be played-off

    against one another.39 However a recent attempt to operationalise Hages

    38Ian Hunter, Culture and Government: the emergence of literary education, Macmillan, London, 1988.

    39It is hard to avoid being persuaded by Hunters historical account of the exemplary role of cultural

    critique even if the sarcasm that often accompanied this argument detracted from Hunters claim to

    appreciate those mundane and routine aspects of the teaching apparatus that are overlooked by overly

    profound approaches. John Frow has noted the discrepancy between Hunters in principle assumption of

    the validity of critique as a pedagogically orientated mode of ethical self-formation and his tendency to

    speak of it as narcissistic, dilettantish and therefore trivial. See his Rationalization and the Public

    Sphere,Meanjin, 51:3, 1992, 505-16, 513. The significance of multiculturalism for curriculum

    development at all levels of the education system can hardly be overstated and constitutes a highly

    dispersed field of policy development with its own distinctive and enduring rationales. The dissemination

    of Hages work in this field is clearly outside the scope ofthis article.

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    critique in a policy context makes such a conclusion unsustainable. In 2002

    Australias Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) published Living Diversity:

    Australias Multicultural Future40, the report of a questionnaire that surveyed a

    national sample group, five non-English speaking background groups (Filipino,

    Greek, Somalis, Vietnamese and Lebanese) and an Aboriginal sample group.41

    SBSs charter requires the public broadcaster to reflect the cultural and linguistic

    diversity of Australia and the research was commissioned by the SBS Board to

    address several questions relating to general attitudes towards cultural diversity,

    diversity in everyday life (such as interacting with people from diverse

    backgrounds), and media consumption, with a focus on generational changes

    amongst non-English speaking background migrant groups and long time

    Australians. Long time Australians were a majority subgroup of the national

    sample defined as fourth-generation (or more) Australians. This group were

    predominantly Anglo-Celtic, but not exclusively so.

    In his contribution to the report, People Mixing: Everyday Diversity in

    Work and Play, Greg Noble introduces the term everyday cosmopolitanism to

    signal a positive difference from both the elite cosmopolitanism Hage had

    proposed on one side, and cultural insularity on the other. Everyday

    cosmopolitanism, which is glossed as an openness to cultural diversity, a

    40Ien Ang, Jeffrey E. Brand, Greg Noble and Derek Wilding,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural

    Future, Special Broadcasting Service Corporation (SBS), Artarmon, NSW, 2002.

    41The National sample group (1437 respondents) included both long time Australians and 1

    stgeneration

    migrant Australians. The other sample group sizes were as follows; 406 Filipinos: 401 Greeks: 400

    Lebanese: 401 Somalis: 400 Vietnamese: and 56 Aboriginal people. All respondents were above the age of

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    practical relation to the plurality of cultures, a willingness to engage with others42

    is to be encouraged: indeed, a key finding of the chapter is that Australians from

    all backgrounds experience everyday cosmopolitanism and that this helps

    explain the generally positive views towards Australias multiculturalism and

    cultural diversity which this Report describes.43 However, the chapter does cite

    Hages cosmopolitan multiculturalism, glossed (after Hage) as a multiculturalism

    without migrants, as a plausible explanation for those long time Australians the

    report identifies as enjoying culturally diverse food, yet having relatively little

    direct intercultural contact.

    44

    Here, the fact that culinary cosmopolitanism is

    very much a mainstream practice, (with 72% of the national sample saying they

    enjoy eating food from other countries45) becomes a site of potential concern.

    While long-time Australians are more likely to enjoy the cultural variety

    of foods in Australia, this is evidence for the multiculturalism without

    migrants Hage (1997) describes: that is, people who consume exotic

    differences but have relatively little direct intercultural contact.46

    However, there are three strong reasons why this conclusion is

    contestable in relation to the data that is presented. First, the report notes it is

    statistically logical for ethnic minorities to experience greater intercultural

    16 at the time of the survey. For more information on the sample groups see Ang et al,Living Diversity:

    Australias Multicultural Future, 67-74.

    42Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 34.

    43Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 6.

    44 Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 37.

    45Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 40.

    46Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 37. The reference is to Hage, At home in

    the entrails of the west.

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    supermarkets, fast-food franchises and convenience stores no less than

    restaurants) far exceeds, for long time Australians, the opportunity to socially

    interact with people from different cultural backgrounds.

    This situation is hardly evidence of the multiculturalism without migrants

    Hage diagnoses, if by this we mean the pursuit of cosmopolitan distinction. This

    is further supported by the fact that the more problematic sub-population of long

    time Australians the report identifies consists of those who lackcosmopolitanism

    and to whom SBS should target their services; namely older groups and those

    with lower levels of education.

    50

    Although I think it is correct to be skeptical that Hages argument holds

    any explanatory import here, as the report suggests, what it clearly does do is act

    as a critical signpost for policy discussion. It flags a possible relation to

    government subsidised culture that the agent behind the report (SBS) might

    monitor in future. Given that a national survey undertaken in the mid-1990s

    demonstrated that a taste for watching Australias two public television

    broadcasters correlated positively with both higher incomes and occupations

    requiring tertiary qualifications, it makes sense for this policy document to

    signpost the nexus of class and cosmopolitanism as something to be concerned

    about.51However, the signpost works because it is detached from Hages moral

    49Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future 31. This measure is also referred to in the

    text as enjoying food from other countries. (p. 30).

    50 Ang et al,Living Diversity: Australias Multicultural Future, 38.

    51Tony Bennett, Michael Emmison and John Frow, Accounting for Tastes: Australian Everyday Cultures,

    Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 234-35.

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    position. As we might expect, the proposed policy solution to the disjunction

    between enjoying foods from different cultures and low level of intercultural

    contact in the long time Australian population is that SBS should consider

    focusing its efforts on older and less well educated long time Australians. Just

    as the report introduces the notion of everyday cosmopolitanism as a way to

    reconceive the field of practices around cultural diversity as non-elitist, it then

    identifies the group in which cosmopolitan capital needs to be built-up.

    Whatever we might think about cosmopolitanism as a lived ethical relation,

    acknowledging it may also be economically and politically productive for

    particular migrant groups (as in the case of cultural tourism) or a resource

    capable of building up nationally valued ethical capacities in citizens (as in the

    case of public broadcasting policy) allows us to take it seriously as a means of

    distributing hope, as Hage calls for. This isnt to eclipse a commitment to equity-

    orientated government programs that address the needs of migrant communities,

    nor to argue against a principled appeal for the maintenance of such programs.

    And it certainly isnt to suggest that the pursuit of cosmopolitan capital by certain

    groups who may thereby secure class-based advantages is not a cause for

    potential concern and further research. It is simply to say a commitment to

    multiculturalism (and its critique) is not well served by refusing to consider

    culture as a resource that is managed for a range of purposes and effects.