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Transformation scenesThe television interior makeoverBrunel University, England, Deborah.Philips{at}brunel.ac.uk The transformation or makeover of people and places has long been a standard feature of popular womens magazines and is now a dominant form of television. The television design programme offers an uneasy interface between the private world of the domestic and the public world of television, a tension apparent in the conventions that surround the encounter between ordinary people and television personalities in interior decoration programmes such asHome Front andChanging Rooms. The magic of television promises that the old fashioned, the dowdy, the tasteless can be transformed through the expertise of designers and experts. This article will address the transformation of designers into television personalities and argue that the experts on the television makeover show act as tastemakers. The article will argue that the growth of the transformation programme on television is bound up with the privatization of property and with the rising cost of housing and that knowledge of interior design is explicitly understood in the language of these programmes as a capital investment. Using Bourdieu, this article suggests that while claiming a democratization of taste, such programmes serve to confirm the superior knowledge and cultural capital of the designated expert. The subjects of the makeover are required by the programmes conventions to accept the dictates of the tastemaker and, in that acceptance, to erase the traces of their own habitus in favour of a commodification of taste and style.
Key Words: Bourdieu taste television
International Journal of Cultural Studies, Vol. 8, No. 2,
213-229 (2005) This article has been cited by other articles:
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