Transmutations of capitals in Canada: A ‘social space’approach
| Titre | {Transmutations of capitals in Canada: A ‘social space’approach} |
| Type de publication | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2009 |
| Authors | Veenstra, G. |
| Journal | Quantifying Theory: Pierre Bourdieu |
| Pagination | 61 - 73 |
| Abstract | Transmutations of capitals refer to processes whereby one form of capital gets converted into another. The French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu extensively theorized capital conversions in a book chapter entitled “The forms of capital” and empirically investigated them in his magnum opus, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste. Bourdieu's perspective on conversions between capitals has since proven to be extremely influential in related research around the globe. Bourdieu explicitly adopted a relational, field-theoretic approach to causality rather than a linear one. Statistical techniques such as regression modeling that complement a linear-causal perspective, however, do not complement a relational worldview, implying that much of the research inspired by Bourdieu is not truly consistent with his theoretical approach. By applying relational statistical techniques to survey data from Canada I attempt here to produce a rare analysis of capital conversions that is analytically faithful to Bourdieu's relational perspective, eschewing linear modeling and consideration of independent and dependent variables and linear relations of causality between them. |
| Contract Number | 1191 |