Free Content Doing — and Undoing — the Done Thing: Dewey and Bourdieu on Habituation, Agency, and Transformation

Author: Colapietro, Vincent

Source: Contemporary Pragmatism, Volume 1, Number 2, December 2004 , pp. 65-93(29)

Publisher: Rodopi

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Abstract:

Both Dewey and Bourdieu emphasize the extent to which human practices are inherited practices, and the extent to which inheritance is a function of imitation. Affinities between Dewey's concept of habit and Bourdieu's notion of habitus are explored. This essay focuses on four variations on the theme of doing the done thing: philosophers doing philosophy in a recognizable form (conversant with the done thing of traditional philosophy), nations perpetuating war as the unwitting enactment of a repetition compulsion, cultures fostering such democratic practices as communal deliberation, and simply the done thing as an integral part of human practices.

Document Type: Research article

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