Bourdieu
Across
- 1. Bourdieu's work largely can be understood as an attempt to overcome the _____ that plagues much of social theory.
- 4. Bourdieu started his teaching career by teaching _____.
- 6. _____ capital is the material resources - land, wealth, and money that one controls or posses.
- 8. The Party is the _____ class.
- 11. The social space, and the differences that "spontaneously" emerge within it, tends to function symbolically as a space of life-styles or as a set of _____, of groups characterized by different life-styles.
- 12. In his groundbreaking book,_____, Bourdieu analyzed the schemes of perception individuals bring to bear on the social world, including works of art.
- 14. ______ are relatively autonomous arenas within which actors and institutions mobilize their capital in an effort to capture the stakes - the distribution of capital - that are specific to it.
- 15. No institution does more to ensure the reproduction of class relations than ______.
- 17. Action is not guided by the logic of profit: it is driven by a _____ logic that Bourdieu likens to a prereflective "feel for the game."
- 18. Titles of nobility, educational qualifications, professional titles are referred to as _____.
Down
- 2. Bourdieu uses the term_____ violence to refer to acts leading to misrecognition of reality or distortion of underlying power relations.
- 3. Bourdieu sees relations of _______ disquised through a false consciousness that renders the social system immune from challenges.
- 5. To reproduce their privileged position the "civilized" need only convince the _____ that the conditions that produce the culturally gifted and ungifted are but the expression of a state of nature that condemns both to their desires.
- 7. The cornerstone of Bourdieu's efforts to link objectivist and subjectivist approaches in his notion of _____, a concept he began to develop during his anthropological studies of Kabyle society in Algeria
- 9. Nominalist relativism cancels out social differences by ____ them to pure theoretical artifacts.
- 10. While drawing on phenomenology and _____, Bourdieu maintains that the habitus is not simply a mental or internal compass that shaps one's attitudes, perceptions, tastes,and inclinations, nor does it refer to one's will or undermined consciousness; it is instead an "internalization of externality.
- 13. Networks of contacts and aquantances that can be used to secure or advance one's position is referred to as _____ capital.
- 16. All the symbolic strategies through which agents seek to impose their vision of the division of the social world and their position within it can be located between two extremes; the insult and the _______ logos.
- 17. Like Marx, Bourdieu sees modern societies as based fundamentally on relations of _____