Franz Schultheis
Studying Bourdieu and moving beyond him: Bourdieu’s theory of the
religious field
When Pierre Bourdieu experienced a
profound life conversion from a philosopher of the École Normale Supérieure to
a field anthropologist and sociologist during his years in Algeria, he got
familiar with Max Weber’s sociology of religion, which was going to remain a
key reference for him. Upon his return to France, thanks to the support of
Raymond Aron, he taught sociology at the University of Lille, and instead of a
course on Durkheim, which he would have preferred, Aron urged him to teach
Weberian sociology. As Bourdieu tells us, this was a decisive moment for him,
as he discovered in Weber’s sociology of religion the elementary structures of
the theory of fields, which were going to accompany the development of his own
theory of the social world in the decades that followed.
The religious field
became paradigmatic in the analysis of other social fields such as the artistic
or the academic field, giving Bourdieu theoretical perspectives and analytical
tools which enabled him to understand and make others understand the social
dynamics that characterize every field, i.e. the competition with regard to the
monopoly of the legitimate definition of the stakes in the field, the existence
of a specific capital around which such competitions are centred (religious
capital, in the case of the religious field, called Heilsgut by Weber), and the production of a
collective belief in the existence of the field, its specific illusio. Nevertheless, if Bourdieu owes
Weber the theoretical inspiration at his starting point, he soon got free from
it and moved beyond the limits of the Weberian paradigm, which according to him
remained bound within an all too interactionistic vision of the religious
field, whereas the perspective Bourdieu developed was going to stress the
«objective» character of the social structures underlying every field of the
social world.
Patrick Champagne
The concept of field in Bourdieu and its application in media analysis
After presenting and discussing
Bourdieu’s theory of fields, the author shows that the autonomy of the
journalistic field is always endangered because it is the uncertain and
unstable result of incompatible principles of legitimacy which struggle, or at
least compete, with one another for dominance in the space of journalism. The
latter is, in effect, characterized by a triple polarization (political,
economic, ethical), the news press and journalists within them having to
negotiate these diverse demands, as we see particularly in large audiovisual
media. In effect, there is no properly «journalistic» principle of legitimacy,
because the news press is constructed in variable proportions by the economy,
is involved in the political game, and has to go by a number of professional
rules in order to be credible (the codes of ethics, more often invoked in
colloquia than put in practice in the field). If changes in the editorial line
of the news press are frequent, this is in consequence of the functioning of
the journalistic field, which is characterized by a constant and general
sliding towards the economic pole.
Nikos Panayotopoulos
The concept of field and the relational way of thinking
This text aims to show that the
concept of field and other concepts which constitute the core of the sociology
of Pierre Bourdieu (habitus, capital, social space, symbolic violence, etc.)
consist in respective research programmes, which can inseminate systematic
elaborations on social reality. The author will try to demonstrate the
practical contribution of the relational way of thinking which the concept of
field presupposes, to the production of further scientific propositions, beyond
the specific empirical context of their original production, or rather to
confirm, emphasizing on the concept of field, that the theory of field as
Bourdieu elaborated it functions as a controlled activation of epistemological
principles of construction of sociological objects and «is nourished by contact
with new empirical objects». In this perspective, the author uses the concept
of field as a working tool which can contribute to the constitution of a real
economics of the phenomena of international symbolic domination.
Anna Boschetti
Working on the literary field: stakes, gains, perspectives
By presenting some contributions of
Bourdieu’s works devoted to literature, the text tries to show that his work
provides valuable tools for the confrontation between disciplines, as it is a
systematic way of thinking which, when applied to very heterogeneous objects,
allows systematic transfer of issues and concepts.
Pierre Bourdieu
The scientific field
The seemingly “pure” and
“disinterested” universe of science is a social field like any other, with its
power relationships and monopolies, its conflicts and strategies, its interests
and profits. A kind of game whose particular stakes consist in the monopoly of
scientific authority (prestige, recognition, fame, and so forth), the scientific
field owes its main characteristics to the fact that the producers generally
have no other possible clients than their direct competitors. For this reason,
the latter are the least inclined to accord (scientific) value to the products
offered without first subjecting them to examination. What is always at stake
in scientific conflicts, in which each of the actors must engage in order to
have the value of his products accepted, is the power of imposing the
definition of science best conforming to his own individual interests; for the
definition of what is at stake is itself part and parcel of the stakes in such
a conflict. And the form taken by this struggle over scientific legitimacy
depends on the structure of the distribution of the specific capital of scientific
recognition among the participants. The history of science shows that, as the
accumulated scientific resources grow, scientific competition tends to assume
the form of a constant series of minor revolutions rather than that of
intermittent great revolutions, and that along with this change the difference
between the conservative strategies of the dominant members of the field and
the subversive strategies of those first entering it («the challengers») seems
to diminish. Accordingly, the fundamental question which arises for a
scientific sociology of science is that of defining the social conditions that
must be fulfilled for a social game to be established in which true ideas
possess great force because the participants have an interest in the truth,
rather than (as in other games) in the preservation of their interests. Science
has no other foundation that the collective belief in its foundations, a belief
which is both the result and the presupposition of the very functioning of the
scientific field. But, depending on the degree of autonomy of the scientific
field under consideration with respect to external determinative factors, the
proportion of social arbitrariness incorporated in the particular system of
presuppositions generating belief can vary widely. In the case of the social
sciences, progress towards the real autonomy which is the condition of a
self-regulating and self sufficient scientific field comes up against obstacles
unknown elsewhere.
Pierre Bourdieu
Political Representation: elements
for a theory of the political field
Within a representative
organization, the more dispossessed the groups it represents are of capital,
especially cultural capital, the greater the tendency towards the concentration
of political capital. The autonomy of the political field, which increases with
the development of permanent organizations of professionals, means that the
positions adopted by the agents are primarily determined in relation to the
universe of competing political positions. Consequently, the correspondence
between the mandators and the mandated is based not so much on direct
transaction as on the homology between the political scene and the field of the
class struggle of which it is the representation. In the struggle which goes on
in the political arena, the professionals have political weight in proportion
to their power to mobilize, i.e. in proportion to the credit and belief which
they receive, either directly from their mandators or from the apparatuses
which invest them to the extent that they invest in the apparatuses. A whole
set of factors tends to cause the organizations representing the dominated
classes to function as apparatuses (or «total institutions»). The
militarization of the active membership is merely the systematic exploitation
of the tendencies inherent in the relationship between the dominated classes
and the parties and in the logic of the political field.
Pierre Bourdieu
The force of the law: elements of a
theory of the legal field
A rigorous sociology of law differs
from what is usually called «juridical science» in that it takes the latter for
its object. Breaking out of the false dilemma of formalism, which asserts the absolute
autonomy of the juridical form vis-à-vis the social word, and instrumentalism, which conceives law as a reflection or a tool in the hands of the dominant
classes, it shows what these two antagonistic visions, internalist and
externalist, both ignore, namely the existence of a social universe relatively
independent of external demands, within which juridical authority, the form par
excellence of the legitimate symbolic violence monopolized by the State, is
exercised and produced. The practical vision of the law that is revealed in the
verdict is the culmination of a symbolic struggle between professionals endowed
with unequal technical and social competences. The constitution of a
specifically juridical competence, often antithetical to the simple
recommendations of common sense, leads to the disqualification of the sense of
equity of non-specialists. This discrepancy between the vulgar vision of the
layman, and the learned vision of the expert –judge, attorney, legal
consultant, etc.– is the basis of a power relation which sets up two different
systems of presuppositions, two socially unequal views of the word, and it
results from the structure and the very functioning of the field where a system
of demands is imposed, at the heart of which is the adoption of a comprehensive
posture, particularly visible in matters of language. Law is no doubt the form
par excellence of the symbolic power of naming and classifying which creates
the things named, and particularly groups. It is not excessive to say that it
makes the social world, so long as it is not forgotten that it is also made by
that world.
Maurice Godelier
What are the social relations that
make a set of human groups and individuals a society?
The basic idea of this text is that
it is only the political-religious relations which establish and legitimize the
sovereignty of a certain number of social groups over their territory, and that
only these relations have the capacity to make these groups into historical
real societies. This thesis contradicts the idea of most anthropologists that
kinship relations form the base of society.
Bernard Vernier
The transformation of forms of
flirting in six Muslim villages in Greece
Youngsters in certain Muslim
villages in Greece habitually meet outdoors every day for an hour to engage in
flirting. The question is how to explain the diversity of the structural forms
of these encounters in six villages which are within a distance of up to 30 km
from each other, their evolution in a 13-year period, and the absence of
internal cohesion in each encounter in relation to several relevant persisting
features: the moment of the encounter (day or night), the outfit of the girls
(more traditional or less so), the type of communication (through eye contact,
gestures, or speech), etc. A study in historical and comparative ethnography
thus appears to be able to function as a real mechanism of scientific
experimentation which can lead to the discovery of general anthropological
truths.
Agnes Fine, Veronique Moulinie &
Jean-Claude Sangoϊ
From mother to daughter: the
transmission of fertility
Recent surveys conducted in France
have exposed the feeling of shame experienced by women who were pregnant at an
age considered by themselves and by those around them to be too late in life.
The unspoken norms related to the age deemed suitable for procreation have been
brought to light, specifically a norm that literally prohibited women from
being mothers again once they were old enough to be grandmothers. The
anthropologists and demographers who have written this article show the
implication of these norms for the succession of generations, in particular the
passing of the power of sexual reproduction from mother to daughter. This
analysis draws on several sources and on a comparison with the practices and
beliefs studied by ethnologists in African societies of the past and present.
Thanks to sources in historical demography and its tools, evidence is presented
about this prohibition and its frequency in two rural areas in southwestern
France during the 19th century. The conclusion raises questions about the
survival and current transformation of these implicit norms, and discusses both
the new approaches opened by this research for historical demography and, more
broadly, the theoretical implications for the social sciences.
Robert Castel
The war on poverty in the United
States: the status of poverty of an affluent society
Accordingly, there exists an organic
relationship between the denial, in the political realm, of a status to poverty
and the proliferation of «psychologistic» techniques on the level at which
poverty is actually handled. The present essay attempts to elucidate this
relation shipby examining the different approaches to public assistance which
have succeeded each other in the United States in the last century. It is found
that almost all the American institutions specialized in the management of
poverty (including the recently established federal bureaucracies) operate with
notions which are ultimately psychological in nature, for the very reason that
their definition of the person receiving assistance is one which denies him a
social status right from the start.
Robert Boyer
Seven scenarios for the future of
the European Union
The recurring difficulties in
overcoming the crisis in the euro area, opened in spring 2010, derive from the
flaws in the economic governance established by the European treaties:
International finance, European Council, Governments of member countries,
European Central Bank and European Commission pursue objectives that prove
inconsistent, and they have not the relevant instruments for a coordinated
response. This mismatch can be overcome if a key actor take the lead and impose
its views and resynchronize the various tools of economic policy. Since July
2012, the ECB has played this role and drives various reforms to restore
confidence in the future of the Euro (scenario 1). However, such a strategy is
not consistent with the German vision of a federalism based on intangible
rules, excluding solidarity and permanent transfers across countries (scenario
2). But this would exacerbate the divergence between Northern and Southern
European trajectories and could lead to a fragmentation of the euro zone
(scenario 3). Rejection by national public opinions of the European discipline
is likely to lead to a beggar-thy neighbor policy, based on nationalism and
protectionism (scenario 4). Given this major risk, the British government would
be in a position to propose a return to a simple free trade zone and a flexible
«ΰ la carte» Europe without any political integration (scenario 5). The answer
of federalists would then be to promote an unprecedented deepening of democracy
at the European level (scenario 6). The failure of all these strategies would
give the primacy to the international finance that would trigger again the
storm by imposing soaring risk premium (scenario 7). These scenarios do not
exclude each other because they have a good chance to be explored sequentially
and possibly hybridize. A radical uncertainty prevails that defies any pretense
to forecasting.
Frederic Lebaron
Why austerity kills: the
consequences of austerity policies in Europe since 2010
The social consequences of austerity
policies in Europe are a democratic issue of primary importance. Only an independent
scientific evaluation of public policies can help determine precisely the share
of responsibility in the growth of social suffering. The work of David Stuckler
and Sanjay Basu The Body Economic illustrates one of the first major achievements of the
project to measure empirically, on the basis of modern methodologies, the
effects of austerity policies in response to economic crises. From the study of
several historical periods, they conclude their great harm to people’s health.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου
Σημείωση: Μόνο ένα μέλος αυτού του ιστολογίου μπορεί να αναρτήσει σχόλιο.