ABSTRACT

This book will give unique insight into how a new generation of Bourdieusian researchers apply Bourdieu to contemporary issues. It will provide a discussion of the working mechanisms of thinking through and/or with Bourdieu when analysing data. In each chapter, individual authors discuss and reflect upon their own research and the ways in which they put Bourdieu to work. The aim of this book is not to just to provide examples of the development of Bourdieusian research, but for each author to reflect on the ways in which they came across Bourdieu’s work, why it speaks to them (including a reflexive consideration of their own background), and the way in which it is thus useful in their thinking. Many of the authors were introduced to Bourdieu’s works after his death. The research problems which the individual authors tackle are contextualised in a different time and space to the one Bourdieu occupied when he was developing his conceptual framework. This book will demonstrate how his concepts can be applied as "thinking tools" to understand contemporary social reality. Throughout Bourdieu’s career, he argued that sociologists need to create an epistemological break, to abandon our common sense – or as much as we can – and to formulate findings from our results. In essence, we are putting Bourdieu to work to provide a structural constructivist approach to social reality anchored through empirical reflexivity.

chapter Chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

The development of Bourdieu's intellectual heritage in UK sociology

chapter Chapter 2|17 pages

Bourdieu's theory of practice

Maintaining the role of capital

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

Narrative, ethnography and class inequality

Taking Bourdieu into a British council estate

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

Re-interpreting Bourdieu, belonging and Black identities

Exploring ‘Black’ cultural capital among Black Caribbean youth in London

chapter Chapter 5|18 pages

‘It's like if you don't go to Uni you fail in life’

The relationship between girls' educational choices, habitus and the forms of capital

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

Using Bourdieusian scholarship to understand the body

Habitus, hexis and embodied cultural capital

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Migrating habitus

A comparative case study of Polish and South African migrants in the UK

chapter Chapter 8|16 pages

The limits of capital gains

Using Bourdieu to understand social mobility into elite occupations

chapter Chapter 9|17 pages

Unresolved reflections

Bourdieu, haunting and struggling with ghosts

chapter Chapter 10|17 pages

Stepping outside of oneself

How a cleft-habitus can lead to greater reflexivity through occupying ‘the third space’

chapter Chapter 11|8 pages

Conclusion

Bourdieu – the next generation