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Pierre Bourdieu Quotes

French sociologist, Birth: 1-8-1930, Death: 23-1-2002 Pierre Bourdieu Quotes
1.
The point of my work is to show that culture and education arent simply hobbies or minor influences. They are hugely important in the affirmation of differences between groups and social classes and in the reproduction of those differences.
Pierre Bourdieu

2.
The most successful ideological effects are those which have no need for words, and ask no more than complicitous silence.
Pierre Bourdieu

3.
Taste classifies, and it classifies the classifier
Pierre Bourdieu

4.
Male domination is so rooted in our collective unconscious that we no longer even see it.
Pierre Bourdieu

5.
The function of sociology, as of every science, is to reveal that which is hidden.
Pierre Bourdieu

Similar Authors: Ludwig von Mises Theodor Adorno Jean Baudrillard Ken Wilber Zygmunt Bauman W. E. B. Du Bois Lewis Mumford Charlotte Perkins Gilman Herbert Marcuse Slavoj Žižek Harriet Martineau Jane Addams Jacques Ellul Jonathan Kozol Emile Durkheim
6.
The difficulty, in sociology, is to manage to think in a completely astonished and disconcerted way about things you thought you had always understood.
Pierre Bourdieu

7.
You cannot cheat with the law of conservation of violence: all violence is paid for, and for example, the structural violence exerted by the financial markets, in the form of layoffs, loss of security, etc., is matched sooner or later in the form of suicides, crime and delinquency, drug addiction, alcoholism, a whole host of minor and major everyday acts of violence.
Pierre Bourdieu

8.
Every established order tends to produce the naturalization of its own arbitrariness.
Pierre Bourdieu

Quote Topics by Pierre Bourdieu: Reality Produce Photography Sociology Thinking Art Self Class Suicide Clarity Mean Law Talent Population Successful Influence Agents Sociological Logic Violence Struggle Mind Roles Domination Objectivity Lessons Important Males Accepting Differences
9.
I often say that sociology is a martial art, a means of self-defense. Basically, you use it to defend yourself, without having the right to use it for unfair attacks.
Pierre Bourdieu

10.
Television enjoys a de facto monopoly on what goes into the heads of a significant part of the population and what they think.
Pierre Bourdieu

11.
Symbolic violence is violence wielded with tacit complicity between its victims and its agents, insofar as both remain unconscious of submitting to or wielding it.
Pierre Bourdieu

12.
The mind is a metaphor of the world of objects.
Pierre Bourdieu

13.
I would simply ask why so many critics, so many writers, so many philosophers take such satisfaction in professing that the experience of a work of art is ineffable, that it escapes by definition all rational understanding; why are they so eager to concede without a struggle the defeat of knowledge; and where does their irrepressible need to belittle rational understanding come from, this rage to affirm the irreducibility of the work of art, or, to use a more suitable word, its transcendence.
Pierre Bourdieu

14.
The point of my work is to show that culture and education aren't simply hobbies or minor influences.
Pierre Bourdieu

15.
If the sociologist has a role, it is probably more to furnish weapons than to give lessons.
Pierre Bourdieu

16.
Only in imaginary experience (in the folk tale, for example), which neutralizes the sense of social realities, does the social world take the form of a universe of possibles equally possible for any possible subject.
Pierre Bourdieu

17.
In stamping photography with the patent of realism, society does nothing but confirm itself in the tautological certainty that an image of reality that conforms to its own representation of objectivity is truly objective.
Pierre Bourdieu

18.
Practice has a logic which is not that of the logician.
Pierre Bourdieu

19.
Algeria is what allowed me to accept myself.
Pierre Bourdieu

20.
Photography itself is most frequently nothing but the reproduction of the image that a group produces of its own integration.
Pierre Bourdieu

21.
Unless saved by exceptional talent, he necessarily pays the price of clarity.
Pierre Bourdieu