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Pierre Bourdieu: structure and
           agency
              Genetic structuralism
              Reflexive Sociology
              (method)
              Cultural Capital
[Linguistic] Structuralism
(revisiting lecture 1)
   Concerned with the underlying structure of meaning in language
    (and human thought)
   Ferdinand de Saussure (1924) 'Course in General Linguistics'
   "language is above all a system of signs and therefore we must
    have recourse to the science of signs if we are to define it
    properly'?
   Semiology (Gr. Semeion - signs) - the science of systems of
    signs
    ’Signs’ includes noises, gestures, conventions, practices, belief
    systems, images, 'symbolic rituals, etiquette, military signals' etc.
Structuralism (2)
   the meanings of 'signs' is not natural nor do they have an intrinsic
    meaning. Rather they are 'arbitrary', and signs are assigned
    meaning
   This leads one to think about the functional rules and conventions
    which govern the assignment of meaning to signs e.g. why
    gestures are given their meaning.
   The 'arbitrariness' of signs differs according to their role/status as
    sytems of communication - i.e. traffic lights vs literary texts and
    advertisements.
   Each sign constitutes a 'signifier' and signified'. Semiology
    concerned with the causal link between them (what causes them
    to be linked, seeing as meaning is arbitrary).
Structuralism (3) Application to social
sciences

      Claude Levi-Strauss (anthropologist) 1961. Trying to make
    explicit the implicit knowledge that enables people to
    communicate, interpret and understand one another's behaviour.
   Application of the construction of meaning in relation to power and
    ideology (Roland Barthes - Myth Today).
   Application of the construction of meaning in relation to social
    practice, cultural signification, class status (Bourdieu).
   How do signs become status symbols? What do these meanings
    and processes say about the organisation of class, status and
    hierarchy in capitalist society?
Three aspects of Bourdieu’s work
1.    Influence of Structuralism on Bourdieu’s idea of ‘genetic
      structuralism. Power relations are embedded in the tissue of
      everyday life. See Bourdieu, P. (1993) Language and Symbolic
      Power. Harvard University Press. Mass
2.    Reflexive Sociology (method)
      - theory must grow out of empirical research
      - participant observation
      - reflexive sociology
      See Bourdieu, P. (1990) The Logic of Practice and Bourdieu, P.
      (1977/1972) Outline of a Theory of Practice.
3.   The symbolic capital of lifestyles in the field of cultural production
      - class, commodities, power and culture
      - habitus, field and capital (economic, social and cultural capital)
      See Bourdieu, P (1974{1979}) Distinction: A Social Critique of the
      Judgement of Taste, Routledge, London
Key concepts

 Field
 Habitus
 Cultural   capital
 Practice
 Distinctions   and class
Reflexive Sociology (method)


   'Outline of a Theory of Practice' (1977{1972})
    Bourdieu’s hermeneutic (relating to the whole)
    understanding of the way people read, understand, interpret
    and live their everyday lives
   an objective analysis of the structures which frame, limit,
    control and influence social life.
   links the objective with the subjective social spheres.
   Breaking down the traditional sociological dualisms
   Argued for complexity of people's activities as
    simultaneously shaping and being shaped by the social
    world.
Objectivism and subjectivism – the
problems
  –   ‘Objectivism‘(reproduction of the world via structures)
      erroneously searched for grand explanations
  –   Critical of structural theories of the left (Althusserian Marxism)
      and right (Parsons)
  –   ‘Objectivism erroneously adopts a mechanistic view of human
      conduct, ignoring the extent to which social life is a practical
      achievement by skilful actors’ (Bourdieu, 1977: 22-23)
  –   Subjectivism: (reproduction of the world by individuals)
  –   Critical of phenomenology and SI For assuming that social
      relations and values emerged automatically from social
      situations but were untouched by social structures, influences
      or forces.
Agency …

 individuals exercised agency but within existing
  social conventions, values and sanctions
 Individuals do not create the world anew
 Behaviour is socially constrained
 our social interactions are already influenced
  by social predispositions, conventions, rules
  etc.
…and Structure
   Structure (the field) social relations were not reproduced in a
    vacuum, but as an outcome of power relations.
   The 'field' of social relations refers to the areas of social life where
    strategies are used in the struggle for resources.
   Therefore, he viewed the relations between practice (what we do
    in our immediate environment) and the field (the larger
    parameters of power relations) as being intrinsically linked
   that sociological methods had to observe both of these dynamics
    together.
Sociological method
   B adopted two sociological methods and rules which
    would be attentive to the complex interactions between
    social groups and social structures.
   Participant observation in which the researcher
    –   should be concerned with the different power relations shaping
        social life, and the most receptive way to observe these was
        by closely observing social practices
    –   Takes account of the way people skilfully improvise their social
        roles or practices
Practice continued – reflexive
sociology

  Reflexive sociology
  – B concerned with the different power relations
    between researcher and the researched
  – Rejected researcher/researched divide
  – Researcher is part of the social world and must
    adopt a critical attitude to own practice
Practice
   Is neither unconscious or conscious - people know how
    to act in daily activities
   People draw from doxa (doxic experience) - i.e. their
    'taken for granted world beyond reflection' (1977).
   The social world into which we are born and in which
    we operate in everyday life is already structured
   Each area of social life has its own social order
   We need unpack the nature of social rules, practices
    and strategies and the intuitive, automatic way people
    read and understand the social world in which they
    operate.
Practice (2)
   we engage in the social world using a combination of
    our 'practical sense' and 'doxa'
   agency involves individuals strategically engaging in
    and manipulating the rules of the social situations -
    playing a game
   going to university and studying for a degree can be
    seen as a game with very definite rules
   Students students develop a 'feel for the game';, I.e
    what are inappropriate, good and bad moves. They
    develop skills to play the game intuitively
This is an example of ‘habitus’ at
work
   the second-nature, understanding of what is
    happening, is crucial to understanding social life.
   B refers to it as habitus.
   Habitus; a set of dispositions resulting in particular
    practices, improvisations, bodily attitude, gestures, etc.
    which provide the 'feeling for the game'.
   Like Blumer and Giddens, but Bourdieu has a deeper
    analysis of the meaning of cultural sings and meaning,
    strategic action and class power.
Cultural capital
   Classical Marxism - the accumulation of profit widens the division
    between those who own and control the means of production, and
    those who rely on waged labour.
   B extends the analysis to everyday cultural reproduction and to a
    notion of cultural power as a key sphere for reproducing class
    domination.
   Access to higher education is a good example
   The cultural ‘goods’ with which students play the game of
    University life
   University life overlaps with other social fields and other areas of
    social privilege (private education or a good state school; family
    situation; social aspirations; access to funding; 'ability' and
    government policy).
Cultural capital (2)
   Getting a place at your chosen University is based on strategic
    struggle to attain different forms of capital (the struggle to get to
    University starts years before you sit your matriculations).
   Educational awards (degrees) are a form of cultural capital which
    are ‘traded’ for money,good jobs, social prestige.
   Symbolic capital is one of the most significant forms of capital.
   Possessors of symbolic capital are not only able to justify their
    possession of other forms of capital but are able to change the
    structure and rules by which the field operates.
   Thus higher education can be seen as a valued commodity which
    reproduces the three different elements of capital (economic,
    cultural and social)
Class and the social sieve -
Distinction
   Pierre Bourdieu's attempts to understand social inequality and
    why it is that people acquiesce to power and being dominated
    without resisting.
   He did not find the answer primarily in economic classes or the
    state, but in culture and ideology.
   And how social classes are reproduced through symbolic
    domination and the education system
   Bourdieu, P (1974{1979)) Distinction: A Social Critique of the
    Judgement of Taste, Routledge, London
    The relations between ‘taste’ and class in French society. Survey
    between 1963-8, 1217 subjects.
   People asked to specify their personal tastes in music, art,
    theatre, home decor, social pastimes, literature etc.
Distinctions (2)
   B held that there still was a dominant valuation in favour of 'high-
    culture' which is still used to express social distinction.
   ‘Good taste’ is dependent on a separation from the necessities of
    daily labour.
   This distance is produced by the status of the bourgeois classes
    as being separate from manual productive labour.
   class power and social inequality are reproduced at athe cultural
    and social level.
   This occurred apparently without resistance or social conflict,
   Is class elitism evident in recent controversies about the BBC
    ‘dumbing down’, complaints about the 'illiteracy' of younger
    generations and the establishment of 'Mickey-Mouse degrees‘?
Bourdieu’s contribution
   Linked the construction of ‘taste’ and cultural practice
    to class distinctions
   It advances Marxist sociology.
   Develops the concept of economic, cultural,
    educational and social capital within a unified
    framework. Through this, a better understanding of
    the reproduction of class and status
   Furthermore, it also advances Bourdieu's general
    theory of society and social agency

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Bourdieu, Pierre: Structure and Agency

  • 1. Pierre Bourdieu: structure and agency Genetic structuralism Reflexive Sociology (method) Cultural Capital
  • 2. [Linguistic] Structuralism (revisiting lecture 1)  Concerned with the underlying structure of meaning in language (and human thought)  Ferdinand de Saussure (1924) 'Course in General Linguistics'  "language is above all a system of signs and therefore we must have recourse to the science of signs if we are to define it properly'?  Semiology (Gr. Semeion - signs) - the science of systems of signs  ’Signs’ includes noises, gestures, conventions, practices, belief systems, images, 'symbolic rituals, etiquette, military signals' etc.
  • 3. Structuralism (2)  the meanings of 'signs' is not natural nor do they have an intrinsic meaning. Rather they are 'arbitrary', and signs are assigned meaning  This leads one to think about the functional rules and conventions which govern the assignment of meaning to signs e.g. why gestures are given their meaning.  The 'arbitrariness' of signs differs according to their role/status as sytems of communication - i.e. traffic lights vs literary texts and advertisements.  Each sign constitutes a 'signifier' and signified'. Semiology concerned with the causal link between them (what causes them to be linked, seeing as meaning is arbitrary).
  • 4. Structuralism (3) Application to social sciences Claude Levi-Strauss (anthropologist) 1961. Trying to make explicit the implicit knowledge that enables people to communicate, interpret and understand one another's behaviour.  Application of the construction of meaning in relation to power and ideology (Roland Barthes - Myth Today).  Application of the construction of meaning in relation to social practice, cultural signification, class status (Bourdieu).  How do signs become status symbols? What do these meanings and processes say about the organisation of class, status and hierarchy in capitalist society?
  • 5. Three aspects of Bourdieu’s work 1. Influence of Structuralism on Bourdieu’s idea of ‘genetic structuralism. Power relations are embedded in the tissue of everyday life. See Bourdieu, P. (1993) Language and Symbolic Power. Harvard University Press. Mass 2. Reflexive Sociology (method) - theory must grow out of empirical research - participant observation - reflexive sociology See Bourdieu, P. (1990) The Logic of Practice and Bourdieu, P. (1977/1972) Outline of a Theory of Practice. 3. The symbolic capital of lifestyles in the field of cultural production - class, commodities, power and culture - habitus, field and capital (economic, social and cultural capital) See Bourdieu, P (1974{1979}) Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, Routledge, London
  • 6. Key concepts  Field  Habitus  Cultural capital  Practice  Distinctions and class
  • 7. Reflexive Sociology (method)  'Outline of a Theory of Practice' (1977{1972})  Bourdieu’s hermeneutic (relating to the whole) understanding of the way people read, understand, interpret and live their everyday lives  an objective analysis of the structures which frame, limit, control and influence social life.  links the objective with the subjective social spheres.  Breaking down the traditional sociological dualisms  Argued for complexity of people's activities as simultaneously shaping and being shaped by the social world.
  • 8. Objectivism and subjectivism – the problems – ‘Objectivism‘(reproduction of the world via structures) erroneously searched for grand explanations – Critical of structural theories of the left (Althusserian Marxism) and right (Parsons) – ‘Objectivism erroneously adopts a mechanistic view of human conduct, ignoring the extent to which social life is a practical achievement by skilful actors’ (Bourdieu, 1977: 22-23) – Subjectivism: (reproduction of the world by individuals) – Critical of phenomenology and SI For assuming that social relations and values emerged automatically from social situations but were untouched by social structures, influences or forces.
  • 9. Agency …  individuals exercised agency but within existing social conventions, values and sanctions  Individuals do not create the world anew  Behaviour is socially constrained  our social interactions are already influenced by social predispositions, conventions, rules etc.
  • 10. …and Structure  Structure (the field) social relations were not reproduced in a vacuum, but as an outcome of power relations.  The 'field' of social relations refers to the areas of social life where strategies are used in the struggle for resources.  Therefore, he viewed the relations between practice (what we do in our immediate environment) and the field (the larger parameters of power relations) as being intrinsically linked  that sociological methods had to observe both of these dynamics together.
  • 11. Sociological method  B adopted two sociological methods and rules which would be attentive to the complex interactions between social groups and social structures.  Participant observation in which the researcher – should be concerned with the different power relations shaping social life, and the most receptive way to observe these was by closely observing social practices – Takes account of the way people skilfully improvise their social roles or practices
  • 12. Practice continued – reflexive sociology Reflexive sociology – B concerned with the different power relations between researcher and the researched – Rejected researcher/researched divide – Researcher is part of the social world and must adopt a critical attitude to own practice
  • 13. Practice  Is neither unconscious or conscious - people know how to act in daily activities  People draw from doxa (doxic experience) - i.e. their 'taken for granted world beyond reflection' (1977).  The social world into which we are born and in which we operate in everyday life is already structured  Each area of social life has its own social order  We need unpack the nature of social rules, practices and strategies and the intuitive, automatic way people read and understand the social world in which they operate.
  • 14. Practice (2)  we engage in the social world using a combination of our 'practical sense' and 'doxa'  agency involves individuals strategically engaging in and manipulating the rules of the social situations - playing a game  going to university and studying for a degree can be seen as a game with very definite rules  Students students develop a 'feel for the game';, I.e what are inappropriate, good and bad moves. They develop skills to play the game intuitively
  • 15. This is an example of ‘habitus’ at work  the second-nature, understanding of what is happening, is crucial to understanding social life.  B refers to it as habitus.  Habitus; a set of dispositions resulting in particular practices, improvisations, bodily attitude, gestures, etc. which provide the 'feeling for the game'.  Like Blumer and Giddens, but Bourdieu has a deeper analysis of the meaning of cultural sings and meaning, strategic action and class power.
  • 16. Cultural capital  Classical Marxism - the accumulation of profit widens the division between those who own and control the means of production, and those who rely on waged labour.  B extends the analysis to everyday cultural reproduction and to a notion of cultural power as a key sphere for reproducing class domination.  Access to higher education is a good example  The cultural ‘goods’ with which students play the game of University life  University life overlaps with other social fields and other areas of social privilege (private education or a good state school; family situation; social aspirations; access to funding; 'ability' and government policy).
  • 17. Cultural capital (2)  Getting a place at your chosen University is based on strategic struggle to attain different forms of capital (the struggle to get to University starts years before you sit your matriculations).  Educational awards (degrees) are a form of cultural capital which are ‘traded’ for money,good jobs, social prestige.  Symbolic capital is one of the most significant forms of capital.  Possessors of symbolic capital are not only able to justify their possession of other forms of capital but are able to change the structure and rules by which the field operates.  Thus higher education can be seen as a valued commodity which reproduces the three different elements of capital (economic, cultural and social)
  • 18. Class and the social sieve - Distinction  Pierre Bourdieu's attempts to understand social inequality and why it is that people acquiesce to power and being dominated without resisting.  He did not find the answer primarily in economic classes or the state, but in culture and ideology.  And how social classes are reproduced through symbolic domination and the education system  Bourdieu, P (1974{1979)) Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste, Routledge, London  The relations between ‘taste’ and class in French society. Survey between 1963-8, 1217 subjects.  People asked to specify their personal tastes in music, art, theatre, home decor, social pastimes, literature etc.
  • 19. Distinctions (2)  B held that there still was a dominant valuation in favour of 'high- culture' which is still used to express social distinction.  ‘Good taste’ is dependent on a separation from the necessities of daily labour.  This distance is produced by the status of the bourgeois classes as being separate from manual productive labour.  class power and social inequality are reproduced at athe cultural and social level.  This occurred apparently without resistance or social conflict,  Is class elitism evident in recent controversies about the BBC ‘dumbing down’, complaints about the 'illiteracy' of younger generations and the establishment of 'Mickey-Mouse degrees‘?
  • 20. Bourdieu’s contribution  Linked the construction of ‘taste’ and cultural practice to class distinctions  It advances Marxist sociology.  Develops the concept of economic, cultural, educational and social capital within a unified framework. Through this, a better understanding of the reproduction of class and status  Furthermore, it also advances Bourdieu's general theory of society and social agency