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Pierre Bourdieu

Pierre Bourdieu (French: [buʁdjø]; 1 August 1930 – 23 January 2002) was a French sociologist and public intellectual.[4][5] Bourdieu's contributions to the sociology of education, the theory of sociology, and sociology of aesthetics have achieved wide influence in several related academic fields (e.g. anthropology, media and cultural studies, education, popular culture, and the arts). During his academic career he was primarily associated with the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris and the Collège de France.

Pierre Bourdieu

Bourdieu's work was primarily concerned with the dynamics of power in society, especially the diverse and subtle ways in which power is transferred and social order is maintained within and across generations. In conscious opposition to the idealist tradition of much of Western philosophy, his work often emphasized the corporeal nature of social life and stressed the role of practice and embodiment in social dynamics. Building upon and criticizing the theories of Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, Max Weber, Émile Durkheim, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Erwin Panofsky and Marcel Mauss among others, his research pioneered novel investigative frameworks and methods, and introduced such influential concepts as cultural, social, and symbolic forms of capital (as opposed to traditional economic forms of capital), the cultural reproduction, the habitus, the field or location, and symbolic violence. Another notable influence on Bourdieu was Blaise Pascal, after whom Bourdieu titled his Pascalian Meditations.


Bourdieu was a prolific author, producing hundreds of articles and three dozen books, nearly all of which are now available in English. His best-known book is Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste (1979), in which he argues that judgments of taste are related to social position, or more precisely, are themselves acts of social positioning. The argument is put forward by an original combination of social theory and data from quantitative surveys, photographs and interviews, in an attempt to reconcile difficulties such as how to understand the subject within objective structures. In the process, Bourdieu attempts to reconcile the influences of both external social structures and subjective experience on the individual.[i] The book was named "the sixth most important sociological work of the twentieth century" by the International Sociological Association (ISA).[6]


Pierre Bourdieu's work emphasized how social classes, especially the ruling and intellectual classes, preserve their social privileges across generations despite the myth that contemporary post-industrial society boasts equality of opportunity and high social mobility, achieved through formal education.

Life and career[edit]

Pierre Bourdieu was born in Denguin (Pyrénées-Atlantiques), in southern France, to a postal worker and his wife. The household spoke Béarnese, a Gascon dialect. In 1962, Bourdieu married Marie-Claire Brizard, and the couple would go on to have three sons, Jérôme, Emmanuel, and Laurent.


Bourdieu was educated at the Lycée Louis-Barthou in Pau before moving to the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris. From there he gained entrance to the École Normale Supérieure (ENS), also in Paris, where he studied philosophy alongside Louis Althusser. After getting his agrégation, Bourdieu worked as a lycée teacher at Moulins for a year before his conscription into the French Army in 1955.


His biographers write that he chose not to enter the Reserve Officer's College like many of his fellow ENS graduates as he wished to stay with people from his own modest social background.[7] Deployed to Algeria in October 1955 during its war of independence from France, Bourdieu served in a unit guarding military installations before being transferred to clerical work.[7]


After his year-long military service, Bourdieu stayed on as a lecturer in Algiers.[8] During the Algerian War in 1958–1962, Bourdieu undertook ethnographic research into the clash through a study of the Kabyle peoples of the Berbers, laying the groundwork for his anthropological reputation. The result was his first book, Sociologie de l'Algérie (1958; The Sociology of Algeria), which became an immediate success in France and was published in America in 1962. He later drew heavily on this fieldwork in his 1972 book Outline of a Theory of Practice, a strong intervention into anthropological theory.[4]


Bourdieu routinely sought to connect theoretical ideas with empirical research and his work can be seen as sociology of culture or, as he described it, a "Theory of Practice". His contributions to sociology were both evidential and theoretical (i.e., calculated through both systems). His key terms would be habitus, capital, and field.


He extended the idea of capital to categories such as social capital, cultural capital, financial capital, and symbolic capital. For Bourdieu each individual occupies a position in a multidimensional social space; a person is not defined only by social class membership, but by every single kind of capital he can articulate through social relations. That capital includes the value of social networks, which Bourdieu showed could be used to produce or reproduce inequality.


In 1960, Bourdieu returned to the University of Paris before gaining a teaching position at the University of Lille, where he remained until 1964. From 1964 onwards Bourdieu held the position of Professor (Directeur d'études) in the VIe section of the École Pratique des Hautes Études (the future École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales), and from 1981 the Chair of Sociology at the Collège de France (held before him by Raymond Aron and Maurice Halbwachs). In 1968, Bourdieu took over the Centre de Sociologie Européenne, founded by Aron, which he directed until his death.


In 1975, with the research group he had formed at the Centre de Sociologie Européenne, he launched the interdisciplinary journal Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales, with which he sought to transform the accepted canons of sociological production while buttressing the scientific rigor of sociology. In 1993 he was honored with the "Médaille d'or du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique" (CNRS). In 1996 he received the Goffman Prize from the University of California, Berkeley and in 2001 the Huxley Medal of the Royal Anthropological Institute.[9] Bourdieu died of cancer at the age of 71.[8]

Legacy[edit]

Bourdieu "was, for many, the leading intellectual of present-day France…a thinker in the same rank as Foucault, Barthes and Lacan."[8] His works have been translated into two dozen languages and have affected the whole gamut of disciplines in the social sciences and the humanities. They have also been used in pedagogy.[44] Several works of his are considered classics, not only in sociology, but also in anthropology, education, and cultural studies. Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (La Distinction) was named as one of the 20th century's ten most important works of sociology by the International Sociological Association.[45] The Rules of Art has significantly affected sociology, history, literature and aesthetics.


In France, Bourdieu was seen not as an ivory tower academic or "cloistered don" but as a passionate activist for those he believed to be subordinated by society. In 2001, a documentary film about Bourdieu—Sociology is a Martial Art—"became an unexpected hit in Paris. Its very title stressed how much of a politically engaged intellectual Bourdieu was, taking on the mantle of Émile Zola and Jean-Paul Sartre in French public life and slugging it out with politicians because he thought that was what people like him should do."[8]


For Bourdieu, sociology was a combative effort that sought to expose the un-thought structures that lie beneath the physical (somatic) and thought practices of social agents. He saw sociology as a means of confronting symbolic violence and of exposing those unseen areas in which one could be free.


Bourdieu's work continues to be influential. His work is widely cited, and many sociologists and other social scientists work explicitly in a Bourdieusian framework. One example is Loïc Wacquant, who persistently applies the Bourdieusian theoretical and methodological principles to subjects such as boxing, employing what Bourdieu termed participant objectivation (objectivation participante), or what Wacquant calls "carnal sociology." In addition to publishing a book on Bourdieu's lasting influence, novelist Édouard Louis uses the legacy of Pierre Bourdieu as a literary device.[x][46]


Bourdieu also played a crucial role in the popularisation of correspondence analysis and particularly multiple correspondence analysis. Bourdieu held that these geometric techniques of data analysis are, like his sociology, inherently relational. "I use Correspondence Analysis very much, because I think that it is essentially a relational procedure whose philosophy fully expresses what in my view constitutes social reality. It is a procedure that 'thinks' in relations, as I try to do it with the concept of field," Bourdieu said, in the preface to The Craft of Sociology.[47]

Academic capital

Collective narcissism

Cultural capital

Erotic capital

Social capital

Structure and agency

Symbolic capital

Taste (sociology)

Constructivist epistemology

Cazier, Jean-Philippe (2006). (in French). Mons: Sils Maria Press. ISBN 9782930242552.

Abécédaire de Pierre Bourdieu

Corchia, Luca (2006). "." Il Trimestrale del Laboratorio [The Lab's Quarterly] 4. Pisa: Dipartimento di Scienze Sociali. ISSN 1724-451X.

La prospettiva relazionale di Pierre Bourdieu (2). I concetti fondamentali

Fowler, Bridget (1997). Pierre Bourdieu and Cultural Theory: Critical Investigations. Thousand Oaks, CA: . ISBN 9780803976269.

SAGE

Grenfell, Michael (2004). Pierre Bourdieu, Agent Provocateur. London: Continuum.  9780826467096.

ISBN

— (2007). Pierre Bourdieu: Education and Training. London: Continuum.  9780826484017.

ISBN

— (2011). Bourdieu, Language and Linguistics. London: Continuum.  9781441154699.

ISBN

— (2012) [2008]. Pierre Bourdieu: Key Concepts (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.  9781844655304.

ISBN

— (2022). Bourdieu's Metanoia. London: Routledge.  9781032192871.

ISBN

Grenfell, Michael; Hardy, Cheryl (2007). Art Rules: Pierre Bourdieu and the Visual Arts. New York: Berg.  9781847886033.

ISBN

Grenfell, Michael; Lebaron, Frederic (2014). Bourdieu and Data Analysis: Methodological Principles and Practice. Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang AG.  9783034308786.

ISBN

Grenfell, Michael; LiPuma, Edward; Postone, Moishe (1993). Pierre Bourdieu: Critical Perspectives. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.  9780226090931.

ISBN

Grenfell, Michael; (2019). Bourdieu, Language Based Ethnographies and Reflexivity: Putting Theory into Practice. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138652262.

Pahl, Kate

(1992). Pierre Bourdieu. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415057981.

Jenkins, Richard

Joseph, John E. (2020). (PDF). Language & Communication. 71: 108–22. doi:10.1016/j.langcom.2020.01.004. S2CID 214032389.

"The agency of habitus: Bourdieu and language at the conjunction of Marxism, phenomenology and structuralism"

Lane, Jeremy F. (2000). Pierre Bourdieu: A Critical Introduction. Sterling, VA: Pluto Press.  9780745315010.

ISBN

(2013). Pierre Bourdieu: l'insoumission en héritage (in French). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. ISBN 9782130619352

Louis, Édouard

Paolucci, Gabriella (ed.), Bourdieu and Marx. Practices of Critique, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022. ( 978-3-031-06288-9)

ISBN

Reed-Danahay, Deborah (2005). Locating Bourdieu. Bloomington: . ISBN 9780253217325.

Indiana University Press

Sallaz, Jeffrey J.; Zavisca, Jane (2007). "Bourdieu in American Sociology, 1980–2004". . 33: 21–41. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.33.040406.131627.

Annual Review of Sociology

(1999). Bourdieu: A Critical Reader. Oxford Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 9780631188186.

Shusterman, Richard

Stahl, Garth (2015). Identity, Neoliberalism and Aspiration: Educating White Working-Class Boys. Abingdon, NY: Routledge.  9781138025875.

ISBN

Steinmetz, George (2011). "Bourdieu, historicity, and historical sociology". Cultural Sociology. 5 (1): 45–66. :10.1177/1749975510389912. S2CID 146483444.

doi

von Holdt, Karl (March 2013). "The violence of order, orders of violence: Between Fannon and Bourdieu". Current Sociology. 61 (2): 112–131. :10.1177/0011392112456492. S2CID 220701604.

doi

(2005). Pierre Bourdieu and Democratic Politics: The Mystery of Ministry. Cambridge, UK: Polity. ISBN 9780745634883.

Wacquant, Loïc

publications indexed by Google Scholar

Pierre Bourdieu

(life, academia, and influence) — edited by Albert Benschop (University of Amsterdam)

Information on Pierre Bourdieu