Open AccessBook
The social structures of the economy
Pierre Bourdieu,Chris Turner +1 more
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the Foundations of Petit Bourgeois Suffering and the Foundational Principles of an Economic Anthropology are discussed, as well as a contract under duress and the construction of the market.Abstract:
Introduction. Part I The House Market. Chapter 1 Dispositions of the Agents and the Structure of the Field of Reproduction. Chapter 2 --The State and the Construction of the Market. Chapter 3 -- The Field of Local Powers. Chapter 4 -- A Contract under Duress. Conclusion -- The Foundations of Petit Bourgeois Suffering. Part II Principles of an Economic Anthropology. Postscript -- From the National to the International Field. Notes. Index.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Social learning and technical capital on the social web
TL;DR: The social Web is a set of ties that enable people to socialize online, a phenomenon that has existed since the early days of the Internet in environments like IRC, MUDs, and Usenet; the fundamental difference was the scale, scope, and diversity of participation.
Dissertation
Infrastructures of continuity and change A material culture approach to finance, heating and maintenance in Belgrade homes
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the relationship between people, their things and socio-economic change, focusing on the material impacts produced inside homes as objects are revalued, ownership lines are redrawn and domestic space is reconfigured.
Journal Article
The Adventure of Elderly in Turkey: Distribution of Cultural Capital among Elderly in Turkey
TL;DR: Turkiye et al. as discussed by the authors proposed an analytical model to evaluate the effect of different types of cultures on the performance of a group of individuals in the context of the Turkish economy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Competing for Jurisdiction: Practical Legitimation and the Persistence of Informal Recycling in Urban India
TL;DR: The authors argue that informal workers preserved their jurisdiction through practical legitimation, depending on everyday actions and social expectations rather than explicit laws or beliefs to secure legitimacy, and demonstrate how status-based relations, here based on caste and labor migration, can confer legitimacy and provide a source of regulation.