Decolonizing Bourdieu : Colonial and Postcolonial Theory in Pierre Bourdieu's Early Work

Onomastique

Pierre Bourdieu

Thématique

sociologie, colonial, postcolonial, champ

Disciplinaire

sociologie

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Titre Decolonizing Bourdieu : Colonial and Postcolonial Theory in Pierre Bourdieu's Early Work
Type de publication Article de périodique
Langue principale de la publication anglais
Date de publication 2013
Auteur Julian Go
Titre du périodique Sociological Theory
Volume ou tome 31
N° de la livraison 1
Éditeur American Sociological Association
Genre article scientifique
Pays d'édition États-Unis
DOI 10.1177/0735275113477082
URL http://stx.sagepub.com/content/31/1/49
Résumé/Présentation "While new scholarship on Pierre Bourdieu has recovered his early work on Algeria, this essay excavates his early thoughts on colonialism. Contrary to received wisdom, Bourdieu did in fact offer a theory of colonialism and a systematic understanding of its effects and logics. Bourdieu portrayed colonialism as a racialized system of domination, backed by force, which restructures social relations and creates hybrid cultures. His theory entailed insights on the limits and promises of colonial reform, anticolonial revolution, and postcolonial liberation. Bourdieu?s early thinking on colonialism drew upon but extended French colonial studies of the time. It also contains the seeds of later concepts like habitus, field, and reflexive sociology while prefiguring more recent disciplinary postcolonial studies. Bourdieusian sociology in this sense originates not just as a study of Algeria but more specifically a critique of colonialism. It can be seen as contributing to the larger project of postcolonial sociology." (site de l'éditeur, 06.2017)
Référence complète Go, Julian. "Decolonizing Bourdieu : Colonial and Postcolonial Theory in Pierre Bourdieu's Early Work", in : Sociological Theory, vol. 31, n°1, 2013.

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