Crane 1992 argues persuasively that , in place of the traditional division of high culture and popular culture, a better way to understand and categorize the current art sacpe is to look at the context in which the arts reach the public. They can be disseminated by for-profit cultural industries, nonprofit prganizations, or local networks. For the most part, it is the popular arts that are distributed through business firms. However, profit-seeking enterprises play a role in the fine arts, too, for instance, in the sales and auction markets for visual arts and in the publishing and recording industries distribution of serious literature and classical music. Nonprofit organizations tend to distribute fine arts, and social networks, both fine and folk arts (though there are exceptions.)