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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Johannesburg : Wits University Press
    ISBN: 1868146251 , 9781868146253 , 9781868147830 , 1868147835
    Language: English
    Pages: Online Ressource (xii, 236 pages)
    Parallel Title: Print version
    DDC: 306.0968
    Keywords: Bourdieu, Pierre 1930-2002 Bourdieu, Pierre (1930-2002) ; Bourdieu, Pierre 1930-2002 ; Since 1994 ; Bourdieu, Pierre ; Bourdieu, Pierre ; Bourdieu, Pierre ; Bourdieu, Pierre ; Politics and government ; Social conditions ; PHILOSOPHY ; General ; South Africa Social conditions ; 1994- ; South Africa Politics and government ; 1994- ; Afrique du Sud ; Conditions sociales ; 1994- ; Afrique du Sud ; Politique et gouvernement ; 1994- ; South Africa ; South Africa Politics and government 1994- ; South Africa Social conditions 1994- ; South Africa Social conditions 1994- ; South Africa Politics and government 1994- ; South Africa ; Afrique du Sud ; Conditions sociales ; 1994- ; Afrique du Sud ; Politique et gouvernement ; 1994- ; Electronic books ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) is the most influential sociologist of our time. His works take in education, culture, sport, literature, painting, class, philosophy, religion, law, media, intellectuals, methodology, photography, universities, colonialism, kinship, schooling and politics. Not much remains outside Bourdieu{u2019}s sociological eye. His works are widely read across disciplines and he was one of the most prominent public intellectuals in France. Conversations with Bourdieu presents the first comprehensive attempt at a critical engagement with Bourdieu{u2019}s theory as a totality. Michael Burawoy constructs a series of imaginary conversations between Bourdieu and his nemesis - Marxism - from which he silently borrowed so much. Starting with Marx, and proceeding through Gramsci, Fanon, Freire, de Beauvoir, and Mills, Burawoy takes up the challenge Bourdieu presents to Marxism, simultaneously developing a critique of Bourdieu and a reconstruction of Marxism. Karl Von Holdt, in turn, brings these conversations to South Africa, showing the relevance of Bourdieu{u2019}s ideas to a country he never visited. Armed with Bourdieu, Von Holdt takes up some of the most pressing social and political issues of contemporary South Africa: the relation between symbolic and real violence, the place of intellectuals in public life, the intervention of gender in politics, the grappling with race, the critique of education, the importance of habitus, the history and future of class mobilisation, and the legacy of the liberation struggle. Conversations with Bourdieu pioneers a distinctive approach to doing social theory that is neither a combat sport nor an artificial synthesis, but a way of pushing theory to its limits through dialogue - dialogue between theorists and dialogue between theory and the world it represents. The book is distinctive too in pointing towards a new global sociology consciously rooted in a dialogue between the social realities and theoretical perspectives of North and South. The conversations were first presented as Mellon Lectures at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in 2010
    Abstract: Prologue : The Johannesburg moment -- Conversation 1 : Sociology as a combat sport. Bordieu meets Bordieu ; Bordieu in South Africa -- Conversation 2 : Theory and practice. Marx meets Bordieu ; Bodies of defiance -- Conversation 3 : Cultural domination. Gramsci meets Bordieu ; Symbolic challenge -- Conversation 4 : Colonialism and revolution. Fanon meets Bordieu ; Violence -- Conversation 5 : Pedagogy of the oppressed. Freire meets Bordieu ; Discipline -- Conversation 6 : The antinomies of feminism. Beauvoir meets Bordieu ; Transforming patriarchy? -- Conversation 7 : Intellectuals and their publics. Mills meets Bordieu ; The symbolic world of politics -- Conversation 8 : Manufacturing dissent. Burawoy meets Bordieu ; The margin of freedom -- Epilogue : Travelling theory
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-226) and index. - Description based on print version record
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