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Introduction : Bourdieu and the literary field
Pierre Bourdieuâs range as a thinker was extremely wide, and it would
be misleading to present him primarily as a literary theorist. Trained
as a philosopher, he became the leading French sociologist of his
generation, and brought under the spotlight of his âcritical sociologyâ
a whole series of institutional and discursive universes (education,
art, linguistics, public administration, politics, philosophy, journalism,
economics and others). Far from representing an intellectual dispersal,
these manifold objects of enquiry allowed him to develop and refine
a comprehensive theory of social process and power-relations based
on distinctive concepts such as âfieldâ, âhabitusâ, variously conceived
notions of âcapitalâ, and âillusioâ (all these concepts and others will
be explicated and assessed in this issue). Yet Bourdieuâs analyses were
scarcely ever received as neutral descriptions within the fields which
he analysed. Bourdieuâs abiding agenda was to show how the discursive
presuppositions and institutional logics at work in such fields carried
but also masked certain social logics that a âcritical sociologyâ could
disclose. Coupled with the inveterately combative drive seldom absent
from Bourdieuâs objectifying analysesâand even setting aside the
misprisions to which an external analyst is inevitably subjectâthis
helps explain the resistance which his work recurrently provoked. In
this respect, Bourdieuâs forays into the world of literary studies and his
reception therein can be seen as part of a wider pattern
The habitus and the critique of the present. A Wittgensteinian reading of Bourdieuâs social theory
I tackle some major criticisms addressed to Pierre Bourdieuâs notion of habitus by
foregrounding its affinities with Ludwig Wittgensteinâs notion of rule-following. To this end, I
first clarify the character of the habitus as a theoretical device, and then elucidate what features
of Wittgensteinâs analysis Bourdieu found of interest from a methodological viewpoint. To
vindicate this reading, I contend that Wittgensteinâs discussion of rule-following was meant to
unearth the internal connection between rules and the performative activities whereby rules
are brought into life. By portraying rules as tools that allow agents to stabilize and renegotiate
practices, I illustrate the active role social agents play in the production of shared accounts of
practices. I conclude by showing that, if viewed through this prism, the habitus proves to be
meant to provide guidance on how social theory helps historicize and denaturalize the social
world
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Bourdieusian Reflections on Language: Unavoidable Conditions of the Real Speech Situation
The main purpose of this paper is to shed light on Pierre Bourdieuâs conception of language. Although he has dedicated a significant part of his work to the study of language and even though his analysis of language has been extensively discussed in the literature, almost no attention has been paid to the factthat Bourdieuâs account of language is based on a number of ontological presuppositions, that is, on a set of universal assumptions about the very nature of language. This article aims to fill this gap in the literature by offering a detailed overview of 10 key features which, from a Bourdieusian point of view, can be regarded as inherent in language. On the basis of this enquiry,the study seeks todemonstrate thatââcontraryto commonbeliefââthere is not only a Bourdieusian sociology of language but also a Bourdieusian philosophy of language, which provides a useful theoretical framework for examining the unavoidable conditions of the real speech situation. The paper draws to a close by reflecting on the flaws and limitations of Bourdieuâs approach to language
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