Vuolo Mike, Uggen Christopher, Lageson Sarah
Sociology, Purdue University.
Br J Sociol. 2014 Sep;65(3):529-54. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12045. Epub 2014 Jan 16.
This article examines taste clusters of musical preferences and substance use among adolescents and young adults. Three analytic levels are considered: fixed effects analyses of aggregate listening patterns and substance use in US radio markets, logistic regressions of individual genre preferences and drug use from a nationally representative survey of US youth, and arrest and seizure data from a large American concert venue. A consistent picture emerges from all three levels: rock music is positively associated with substance use, with some substance-specific variability across rock sub-genres. Hip hop music is also associated with higher use, while pop and religious music are associated with lower use. These results are robust to fixed effects models that account for changes over time in radio markets, a comprehensive battery of controls in the individual-level survey, and concert data establishing the co-occurrence of substance use and music listening in the same place and time. The results affirm a rich tradition of qualitative and experimental studies, demonstrating how symbolic boundaries are simultaneously drawn around music and drugs.
本文探讨了青少年和青年成人音乐偏好与物质使用的关联集群。研究考虑了三个分析层面:对美国广播市场总体收听模式和物质使用情况的固定效应分析;来自一项具有全国代表性的美国青年调查中个人音乐流派偏好与药物使用情况的逻辑回归分析;以及来自美国一个大型音乐会场地的逮捕和查获数据。从这三个层面得出了一致的结果:摇滚音乐与物质使用呈正相关,且在不同摇滚子流派中存在一些特定物质的差异。嘻哈音乐也与更高的物质使用相关,而流行音乐和宗教音乐则与较低的物质使用相关。这些结果对于考虑广播市场随时间变化的固定效应模型、个人层面调查中的一系列全面控制因素以及表明物质使用和音乐收听在同一地点和时间同时发生的音乐会数据而言是稳健的。这些结果证实了定性研究和实验研究的丰富传统,展示了如何同时围绕音乐和毒品划定象征性界限。