Language and Symbolic Power
β Scribed by Pierre Bourdieu
- Publisher
- Harvard University Press
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 151
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents......Page 3
Preface......Page 4
Editor's Introduction......Page 6
Editor's Introduction: I
......Page 7
Editor's Introduction: II
......Page 12
Editor's Introduction: III
......Page 18
General Introduction......Page 22
Part I: The Economy of Linguistic
Exchanges......Page 23
Introduction
......Page 24
1. The Production and Reproduction of
Legitimate Language......Page 27
1.1.
Official Language and Political Unity......Page 28
1.2. The 'Standard' Language: A 'Normalized' Product
......Page 29
1.3.
Unification of the Market and Symbolic Domination......Page 31
1.4. Distinctive Deviations and Social Value
......Page 32
1.5. The Literary Field and the Struggle for Linguistic Authority
......Page 34
1.6. The Dynamics of the Linguistic Field
......Page 36
2.1 Capital, Market and Price......Page 39
2.2. Symbolic Capital: A Recognized Power
......Page 42
2.3. The Anticipation of Profits
......Page 44
2.4. The Linguistic Habitus and Bodily Hexis
......Page 46
Appendix:
Did You Say 'Popular'?......Page 51
Part II: The Social Institution of Symbolic
Power......Page 57
Introduction
......Page 58
3. Authorized Language: The Social Conditions for the Effectiveness
of Ritual Discourse......Page 59
4.
Rites of Institution......Page 64
5. Description and Prescription: The Conditions of Possibility and the Limits
of Political Effectiveness......Page 69
6. Censorship and the Imposition of Form......Page 74
6.1 The Rhetoric of the False Break
......Page 76
6.2. Internal Reading and the Respect for Forms
......Page 81
Part III: Symbolic Power and the Political
Field......Page 86
7.
On Symbolic Power......Page 87
7.2. '
Symbolic Systems' as Structured Structures (Susceptible to Structural Analysis)......Page 88
Second synthesis
......Page 89
7.4. Sources and Effects of Symbolic Power
......Page 90
8. Political Representation:
Elements for a Theory of the Political Field......Page 91
8.1. The Monopoly of the Professionals
......Page 92
8.2.
Competence, Stakes and Specific Interests......Page 93
A Self-interested Blunder
......Page 95
8.3. The Double Game......Page 96
8.4. A System of Deviations
......Page 98
8.5. Slogans and Mobilizing Ideas
......Page 100
8.6. Credit and Credence
......Page 102
8.7. The Kinds of Political Capital
......Page 103
8.8.
The Institutionalization of Political Capital......Page 104
8.9. Field and Apparatus
......Page 105
9.
Delegation and Political Fetishism......Page 107
9.1. The Self-Consceration of the Delegate
......Page 110
9.2. Homology and the Effects of Misrecognition
......Page 113
9.3. The Delegates of the Apparatus
......Page 114
10. Identity and Representation: Elements for a Critical Reflection on the Idea
of Region......Page 116
11.1. The Social Space
......Page 120
11.2. Classes on Paper
......Page 121
11.3. The Perception of the Social World and Political Struggle
......Page 123
11.4. The Symbolic Order and the Power of Naming
......Page 125
11.5. The Political Field and the Effect of Homologies
......Page 128
11.6. Class as Will and Representation
......Page 130
Editor's Introduction......Page 132
1. The Production and Reproduction of Legitimate Language......Page 134
2. Price Formation and the Anticipation of Profits
......Page 136
Appendix to Part I......Page 138
6.
Censorship and the Imposition of Form......Page 140
8.
Political Representation: Elements for a Theory of the PoliticalField......Page 144
10. Identity and Representation: Elements for a Critical
Reflection on the Idea of Region......Page 149
11.
Social Space and the Genesis of 'Classes'......Page 150
Index (missing!)
......Page 151
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