The work of Pierre Bourdieu, one of the most influential French intellectuals of the twentieth century, has had an enormous impact on research in fields as diverse as aesthetics, education, anthropology, and sociology. Pierre Bourdieu: Fieldwork in Art, Literature, and Culture is the first collection of essays to focus specifically on the contribution of Bourdieu's thought to the study of cultural production. Though Bourdieu's own work has illuminated diverse cultural phenomena, the essays in this volume extend to new cultural forms and to national situations outside France. Far from simply applying Bourdieu's concepts and theoretical tools to these new contexts, the essays in this volume consider both the possibility and limits of Bourdieu's sociology for the study of culture.
Recenzijos
This sparkling and unusually coherent collection of essays emphasizes the American reception and adaptation of Bourdieu's work. It shows how Bourdieu has been resisted and embraced and discusses how his terms and methods might be both used and modified by American academics. Theoretical reflections are productively complemented by empirical investigations of non-canonical and popular artistic expressions and by discussions of the position of women in Bourdieu's thought. -- Marshall Brown, University of Washington Readers in different national contexts should use [ this book] to reflect on the social factors affecting their responses to Bordieu's work. * Times Literary Supplement, (London) * The book Pierre Bourdieu is useful to researchers who contemplate what really useful knowledge and work are in contemorary academe where social structures and cultural forms too often conform to the marketplace logic of late capitalism. * Interchange * Intellectual historians, sociologists, anthropologists and anyone interested in the discipline of cultural studies will want to spend some time with this book. * International Social Science Review *
Acknowledgments and Credits ix Abbreviations xi Introduction: Fieldwork in Culture 1(18) Nicholas Brown Imre Szeman PART I Bourdieus Refusal 19(25) John Guillory Resistance, Recuperation, and Reflexivity: The Limits of a Paradigm 44(21) Carol A. Stabile Anglicizing Bourdieu 65(22) Daniel Simeoni Bourdieu and Common Sense 87(13) Robert Holton Value and Capital in Bourdieu and Marx 100(23) Jon Beasley-Murray PART II Cultural Studies Bourdieus Way: Women, Leadership, and Feminist Theory 123(22) Maire-Pierre Le Hir Habitus Revisited: Notes and Queries from the Field 145(20) Caterina Pizanias Pierre Bourdieus Fields of Cultural Production: A Case Study of Modern Jazz 165(21) Paul Lopes Romancing Bourdieu: A Case Study in Gender Politics in the Literary Field 186(21) Marty Hipsky The Prestige of the Oppressed: Symbolic Capital in a Guilt Economy 207(8) Carolyn Betensky Space, Time, and John Gardner 215(26) Bo G. Ekelund Pasport to Duke 241(6) Pierre Bourdieu Index 247(4) About the Contributors 251
Nicholas Brown is assistant professor of English at the University of Illinois-Chicago. Imre Szeman is assistant professor of English at McMaster University.