Burawoy, Michael
The Roots of Domination: Beyond Bourdieu and Gramsci.
In this article I examine Bourdieu's conception of symbolic domination as based on misrecognition and compare it with Gramsci's notion of hegemony based on consent. Drawing on ethnographic research in workplaces in the USA and Hungary I show how both theories are flawed. Gramsci does not appreciate the importance of mystification as a foundation for stable hegemony in advanced capitalism while Bourdieu's notion of misrecognition, based on the notion of habitus, is too deep to comprehend the fragility of state socialist regimes. Comparative analysis, I argue, calls for a concept of domination that is more contingent than Bourdieu's symbolic domination, yet deeper than Gramsci's hegemony.
Lingua | eng |
Nomi |
[author] Burawoy, Michael |
Soggetti |
Bourdieu, Pierre
Consenso Egemonia Dominazione
Bourdieu, Pierre
consent Hegemony Domination |