Hilgers, Mathieu
[ULB]
Mangez, Eric
[UCL]
This work aims to introduce the reader to Pierre Bourdieu's theory of fields, to evaluate it critically and, through case studies, to test its implementation in the analysis of new objects. While the use of Bourdieu's concept of the habitus has given rise to countless discussions, the literature strangely remains more silent on the theory of fields, although it lies at the heart of his work. A series published by Editions du Seuil, started and initially edited by Bourdieu, includes a number of monographs that apply the theory of fields;r some journals have devoted whole issues to explicitly mobilizing the theory in order to study specific areas, and a growing number of works make use of it. However, critical discussions that seek to give an account of this theory both in general terms and in particular areas remain rare. The aim of this work is to fill that gap. One of the hypotheses put forward in this book is that the theory of fields constitutes an adequate tool for explaining and understanding the social world but that its use must be rigorously circumscribed and correspond to certain methodological principles.


Bibliographic reference |
Hilgers, Mathieu ; Mangez, Eric. Bourdieu's Theory of Social Fields: Concepts and Applications. Routledge : Abingdon (2014) (ISBN:978-1-138-77765-1) 290 pages |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/151622 |