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Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

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Page 1: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Politics of Leisure and Recreation

Feb. 19, 2008

Page 2: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Paid Annual Leave/Paid Vacation Time in OECD

Countries

Paid Annual Leave/Paid Vacation Time in OECD

Countries

Page 3: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Response PaperResponse Paper

Due Tuesday Feb 26: Requires you to read Bourdieu and view (or read) the Great Gatsby

• Response Paper (750-1000 words)

Due Tuesday Feb 26: Requires you to read Bourdieu and view (or read) the Great Gatsby

• Response Paper (750-1000 words)

Page 4: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008
Page 5: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Pierre BourdieuPierre Bourdieu

French sociologistSon of a sharecropperEntered Ecole Normale

SuperieurConducted research in Algeria,

FranceSociology as a Combat Sport

French sociologistSon of a sharecropperEntered Ecole Normale

SuperieurConducted research in Algeria,

FranceSociology as a Combat Sport

Page 6: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Refining MarxRefining Marx

• Offers a more complex model of class relations than the dichotomy of the dominant/subordinate

• Leads us to pay attention to the cultural and symbolic dimensions of class

• Offers a more complex model of class relations than the dichotomy of the dominant/subordinate

• Leads us to pay attention to the cultural and symbolic dimensions of class

Page 7: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Key IdeasKey Ideas

• Cultural Capital• Habitus

• Cultural Capital• Habitus

Page 8: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Cultural CapitalCultural Capital

• Refers to non-material types of wealth, such as access to knowledge, trend-setting taste cultures in leisure and consumer culture

• access to cultural capital was important way to acquire social prestige and success

• Refers to non-material types of wealth, such as access to knowledge, trend-setting taste cultures in leisure and consumer culture

• access to cultural capital was important way to acquire social prestige and success

Page 9: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008
Page 10: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008
Page 11: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

••

Page 12: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

HabitusHabitus

• the system of structured, structuring dispositions

• It is a set of embodied dispositions

• It is set by the historically and socially situated conditions of its production

• the system of structured, structuring dispositions

• It is a set of embodied dispositions

• It is set by the historically and socially situated conditions of its production

Page 13: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• The logic of consumption is reasonable without being the product of reasoned design, less of rational calculation

• The logic of consumption is reasonable without being the product of reasoned design, less of rational calculation

Page 14: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Key ClaimsKey Claims

• Aesthetic stances adopted in matters like cosmetics, clothing, or home decoration are opportunities to experience or assert one’s position in social space, as rank to be upheld or a distance to be kept” (57)

• Aesthetic stances adopted in matters like cosmetics, clothing, or home decoration are opportunities to experience or assert one’s position in social space, as rank to be upheld or a distance to be kept” (57)

Page 15: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• “Consumption presupposes practical or explicit mastery of a cipher or code… A work of art has meaning and interest only for someone who possesses the cultural competence, that is, the code, into which it is encoded.”

• “Consumption presupposes practical or explicit mastery of a cipher or code… A work of art has meaning and interest only for someone who possesses the cultural competence, that is, the code, into which it is encoded.”

Page 16: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• “The field of drinks, for instance, or household furnishings…allow the most fundamental social differences to be expressed almost as completely as through the most complex and refined expressive systems available in the legitimate arts”

• “The field of drinks, for instance, or household furnishings…allow the most fundamental social differences to be expressed almost as completely as through the most complex and refined expressive systems available in the legitimate arts”

Page 17: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• “At stake in every struggle over art there is also the imposition of an art of living, that is, the transmutation of an arbitrary way of living into the legitimate way of life”

• “At stake in every struggle over art there is also the imposition of an art of living, that is, the transmutation of an arbitrary way of living into the legitimate way of life”

Page 18: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Response Feb. 26OnBourdieu-GatsbyResponse Feb. 26

OnBourdieu-Gatsby• 1. Economic power is first and foremost a power to keep economic necessity at arm’s length. This is why it universally asserts itself by the destruction of riches, conspicuous consumption, squandering and every form of gratuitous luxury.

• 1. Economic power is first and foremost a power to keep economic necessity at arm’s length. This is why it universally asserts itself by the destruction of riches, conspicuous consumption, squandering and every form of gratuitous luxury.

Page 19: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• 2. Social classes, especially the ruling and intellectual classes, reproduce themselves even under the pretence that society fosters social mobility.They do so through“aesthetic stances adopted in matters like cosmetics, clothing, or home decoration, which are opportunities to experience or assert one’s position in social space, as rank to be upheld OR a distance to be kept” (57) .

• 2. Social classes, especially the ruling and intellectual classes, reproduce themselves even under the pretence that society fosters social mobility.They do so through“aesthetic stances adopted in matters like cosmetics, clothing, or home decoration, which are opportunities to experience or assert one’s position in social space, as rank to be upheld OR a distance to be kept” (57) .

Page 20: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

• Using the Great Gatsby as your ethnographic case study, discuss these quotations and apply them to the lives of key characters in the film. You may also refer to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s book The Great Gatsby upon which the film is based.

• Using the Great Gatsby as your ethnographic case study, discuss these quotations and apply them to the lives of key characters in the film. You may also refer to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s book The Great Gatsby upon which the film is based.

Page 21: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

3) When the “have nots” adopt the leisure practices of the wealthy, what happens? According to Bourdieu, does social change occur? How and in what ways? Do you agree with his perspective?

3) When the “have nots” adopt the leisure practices of the wealthy, what happens? According to Bourdieu, does social change occur? How and in what ways? Do you agree with his perspective?

Page 22: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Feb 21 Thursday lecture

Feb 21 Thursday lecture

In Bourdieu’s analysis, what are the key social institutions that confer cultural capital

In Bourdieu’s analysis, what are the key social institutions that confer cultural capital

Page 23: Politics of Leisure and Recreation Feb. 19, 2008

Feb 26 and 28 SeminarFeb 26 and 28 Seminar

• Discussion will build from response paper questions

• Lecture: Enriching the Bourdieuan perspective

• Discussion will build from response paper questions

• Lecture: Enriching the Bourdieuan perspective