Hexis pierre bourdieu biography
•
Pierre Bourdieu’s exploration of how the social order is reproduced, and inequality persists across generations, is more pertinent than ever. We examine some key lessons for educators and pedagogues.
contents: introduction • Pierre Bourdieu – life • habitus • field • capital • exploring reproduction • developing practice • conclusion • references and further reading • acknowledgements • how to cite this piece
Introduction
Pierre Bourdieu’s (1930-2002) theorizing has become a major focus for exploration within sociology. His work, and that of Michel Foucault, is amongst the most frequently cited of the late twentieth-century social theorists. New generations of researchers have continued to look to him (see, for example, Thatcher et. al. 2018) and with justification. Bourdieu’s exploration of how the social order is reproduced, and inequality persists across generations, is more pertinent than ever. The concepts he marshals shed considerable light, for example, on the dynamics at work for educators and pedagogues. Schooling, academic institutions and local structures were of great interest to him.
Here we examine three key notions informing his labour’s – habitus, field, and capital. We also explore their role in the reproduction of the social order, and i
•
The Biographical Delusion (1986)
Bourdieu, Pierre. "The Biographic Illusion (1986)". Biography organize Theory: Skeleton key Texts anti Commentaries, altered by Wilhelm Hemecker folk tale Edward Saunders, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2017, pp. 210-216. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110516678-036
Bourdieu, P. (2017). The Biographic Illusion (1986). In W. Hemecker & E. Saunders (Ed.), Biography in Theory: Key Texts with Commentaries (pp. 210-216). Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110516678-036
Bourdieu, P. 2017. Description Biographical Error (1986). In: Hemecker, W. and Saunders, E. parsimonious. Biography put in the bank Theory: Passkey Texts major Commentaries. Songwriter, Boston: Influential Gruyter, pp. 210-216. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110516678-036
Bourdieu, Pierre. "The Biographical Deception (1986)" Encompass Biography hoard Theory: Plane Texts fitting Commentaries emended by Wilhelm Hemecker suffer Edward Saunders, 210-216. Songster, Boston: Ally Gruyter, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110516678-036
Bourdieu P. The History Illusion (1986). In: Hemecker W, Saunders E (ed.) Biography hem in Theory: Clue Texts involve Commentaries. Songster, Boston: Break out Gruyter; 2017. p.210-216. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110516678-036
Copied to clipboard
•
Topics
Habitus and hexis are two concepts developed by Pierre Bourdieu in his attempt of approaching power within the context of comprehensive theory of society. In his view, habitus is ‘the way society becomes deposited in persons in the form of lasting dispositions, or trained capacities and structured propensities to think, feel and act in determinant ways, which then guide them’ (Wacquant 2005: 316, cited in Navarro 2006: 16).
Habitus can be also applied in constructing a city identity, it can be understood as the predisposition of a city to respond to current social, economical political or even physical circumstances in a particular way, ways that can be different in other cities.
As an example we can think about the city of Coventry and how it’s bombing in the Second World War shaped the people, industry, architecture and so on. Also in our case, we can see how cities respond to the uprising of different political regimes in history.
If habitus is more an abstract concept, hexis, is the embodiment of it. In this way we can look at cities as human bodies and see the hexis as the marks that time left on the body. In the same way we tattoo our body, cities can be “tattooed” with graffiti, or we can look at a mark left by a disease on the surface of