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Bourdieu in American Sociology, 1980-2004 Jeffrey J. Sallaz and Jane Zavisca, 2007 As reviewed by Ralph Soule and Tamara Sole
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Article’s Purpose To evaluate the degree to which Pierre Bourdieu’s work informed or influenced the discipline of sociology in America between 1980-2004
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Key Take-Aways Bourdieu developed theories for relating culture and inequality There’s been a steady diffusion of Bourdieu’s writings into American sociology throughout the past 25 years An increasing use of Bourdieu’s ideas in American sociology research Bourdieu’s cultural capital remains the key influence on American sociology research
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Overview of Bourdieu’s Concepts Critical of a “mediocre and empirical” strand within sociology Social structures influence individual mental structures that in turn reproduce or change social structures through Capital: economic, cultural, social, symbolic Field: The social “playing field” upon which actors act Habitus: socially learned dispositions, skills and ways of acting, often taken for granted Symbolic power: the ability of dominant groups to impose a social structure that suits their wishes
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Overview of Bourdieu’s Concepts (cont.) Symbolic dimension of class inequality and reproduction Grave doubts about ethnography since researchers can never truly see the world from their subjects’ point of view States are essential for making and maintaining market fields, the “global market” is a political creation The characteristics of products, especially symbolic meaning for consumers, exerts an independent influence on suppliers. Common critiques: ideas are too static and too specific to French society
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Methodologies Quantitative content analysis of 4 prominent sociology journals American Journal of Sociology American Sociological Review Social Forces Social Problems Review of 4 books explicitly apply Bourdieu’s theories Making Capitalism Without Capitalists (Eyal, et al. 1999) The Architecture of Markets (Fligstein, 2002) Money, Morals, and Manners (Lamont, 1994) Body and Soul, (Wacquant, 2004)
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Article’s Conclusion American scholars are increasingly likely to cite and acknowledge Bourdieu’s work Increased interest (as of 2004) in Bourdieu’s work is not a fad or short-lived. Bourdieu citations were substantive Many scholars are applying Bourdieu’s theories and are moving the research forward Bourdieu’s ideas were not limited to France since they have been successfully transposed to the US and other countries.
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Questions If social structures generate individual mental structures that in turn reproduce social structures, how do social structures change? Give some examples of symbolic power (what Bourdieu called the most effective form of power), the capacity of dominant groups to impose “the definition of the social world that is best suited to their interests.” Is there anything profound about Bourdieu’s assertion that states are essential for making and maintaining market fields, or is this just a statement of the obvious?
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