%0 Journal Article %T The embourgeoisement of beer: Changing practices of ¡®Real Ale¡¯ consumption %A Thomas Thurnell-Read %J Journal of Consumer Culture %@ 1741-2900 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1469540516684189 %X Recent years have seen changes in the practice of beer consumption, which appear to indicate raised standards of cultural prestige. This article focuses on the practice of Real Ale consumption, which has been promoted by the UK consumer pressure group, the Campaign for Real Ale, since 1971, and analyses how beer consumption has achieved an increased cultural position relative to understandings of taste and cultural capital. The article also draws on qualitative research, including interviews, archival material analysis and participant observation. Following recent advances in practice theories of consumption, the article identifies important changes in the materials, meanings and competencies of Real Ale consumption, which mean that a more complex ¡®intellectualised¡¯ form of beer appreciation has emerged over recent years. The article argues that by tracking these changes, it is possible to illustrate how cultural tastes and practices have undergone a process of ¡®embourgeoisement¡¯. Specifically, exponents of Real Ale appreciation practices have borrowed from proximate practices, such as wine and food consumption, in seeking increased value. Beer consumption has become subjected to upward social mobility in becoming more complex and refined, meaning that it now functions more readily as a marker of social status. However, there is some suggestion that such a process of embourgeoisement has also generated antagonisms, with some consumers being excluded by discourses of taste and status %K Beer consumption %K connoisseurship %K cultural capital %K practice theory %K taste %K embourgeoisement %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1469540516684189