En
English

Beyond Bourdieu Hardcover

Recommend
0 %
Authors Estimates
0
1
0
2
0
3
0
4
0
5
Sort by
Rating
Date
Specifications
Author 1
Will Atkinson
Book Description
Pierre Bourdieu is arguably the most influential sociologist of the twentieth century, especially since the once common criticisms of his determinism and reproductionism have receded. Now, however, his intellectual enterprise faces a new set of challenges unearthed by decades of sympathetic research: how to conceive the relationship between society and place, particularly in an increasingly global world; how to recognize the individual as a product of multiple forces and pressures; how to make sense of family relations and gender domination; and, ultimately, how to grasp how we each come to be the unique beings we are. This book tackles these challenges head on, starting from the philosophical core of Bourdieu's sociology and taking in hints and suggestions across his corpus, to propose a range of novel concepts and arguments. In the process it outlines a new way of looking at the world to complement Bourdieu's own one in which the focus is on the multiple social structures shaping individuals' everyday lives, not the multiple individuals comprising a single social structure.
ISBN-10
1509507485
Language
English
Publisher
Polity Press
Publication Date
26 September 2016
Number of Pages
192
About the Author
Will Atkinson is Lecturer in Social Research at the University of Bristol
Editorial Review
This outstanding book is bound to inspire the growing numbers of students and academics interested in Pierre Bourdieu's general orientation and in building their own work on it. It makes an important contribution, particularly to Bourdieusian studies in family, gender and childhood. Leena Alanen, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland "Atkinson's book pushes the field of Bourdieu studies into new and exciting territory. Drawing on the author's expertise in phenomenology, it shows how Bourdieu's theory can illuminate the study of everyday life, the family and gender. This will be an essential resource for Bourdieu scholars for years to come." Jeffrey J. Sallaz, University of Arizona