Habitus
From Geography
In sociology habitus is a term that describes a sustainable way of observing, thinking and acting. In the theories we studied ‘Bourdieu’s habitus’ has an important role. According to Bourdieu we can describe habitus as the mental structure that individuals develop during their live in a certain social sphere. This mental structure defines the way individuals observe, appreciate and act.
Because the development of the habitus depends on the social sphere an individual lives in, according to Bourdieu, you can notice similarities in the habitus of two individuals who grew up in the same social sphere. These habitus similarities, caused by developing the habitus in comparable spheres, can also be recognized on a bigger scale level. For example think of the behaviour differences between people living in the Randstad and people living in the north of the Netherlands. Take in account that off course there will be individual exceptions.
The term habitus can help by understanding the classical dichotomy between subjective and objective thinking. One that is thinking subjective will say that the society is formed by individual observing, appreciating and acting human beings. The opposite one that is thinking objective will say that the individual observing, appreciating and acting is formed by structures in the society.
References:
Bourdieu,P. Cultural Studies: Representation and Identity Consulted: 15 October 2010 http://www.eng.fju.edu.tw/Literary_Criticism/cultural_studies/bourdieu.html
Flinterman,J.J. De sociologie van Pierre Bourdieu voor studenten in 600 woorden samengevat, …. Consulted: 17 October 2010 http://www.xs4all.nl/~flinterm/Pierre-Bourdieu-samengevat.html
Published by Tobias Geerdink (4076923)