000 01902cam a2200217 4500500
005 20250121135404.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aSuaud, Charles
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aPierre Bourdieu: Sociology as a “symbolic revolution”
260 _c2014.
500 _a44
520 _aThis article aims to understand the genesis and development of the sociology of Bourdieu in connection with his social and intellectual positioning. The sociology of Bourdieu is a theory of action that reconciles the dual requirement of objectification and that of taking into account the practical logic bound by social agents. Staring with the both objective and subjective character of the social space, he analyzed how different institutions (firstly school) make mental structures match the objective structures of society. By making reality acceptable and registering it in the body, these instances contribute to reproducing social divisions and participate in the work of domination. Gradually, Bourdieu developed a general theory about power, which led him to create a sociology of the state. But he refused any sociological fatalism. Because he perceived homologies between the sociologist and the artist facing the social order, each in their own way, he devoted two research studies to Flaubert and Manet, engaged in the same enterprise of aesthetic subversion he described as a “symbolic revolution.” In many aspects, the sociology of Bourdieu opens ways of looking for an objectification of caregivers and their practices.
690 _adomination
690 _aincorporation
690 _apower
690 _asymbolic struggle
690 _asocial space
786 0 _nRecherche en soins infirmiers | o 116 | 1 | 2014-05-01 | p. 81-94 | 0297-2964
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-recherche-en-soins-infirmiers-2014-1-page-81?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c578293
_d578293