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Theory, Culture & Society
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Scientific Habitus

Pierre Bourdieu and the Collective Intellectual

Remi Lenoir

Université de Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne)

According to Bourdieu, the `collective intellectual' resembles the sports team in terms of the spirit which drives it (in this case the `scientific spirit', in the sense that Bachelard used the term), the collectivist attitudes implied by its activity, and the form of apprenticeship involved - constant, intensive and regular training. The combination of these elements gives rise to gestures and syntheses which are constantly, incessantly repeated to the point where they become a habitus (what Bourdieu called the scientific habitus); it also creates the mutually supportive force, mobilized in its practical, articulate and coherent mode, which Bourdieu believed a research centre - a specific form taken by the collective intellectual in the scientific sphere - should constitute. His prime concern, a principle evident from the start both in his experience of teaching and in the first research projects he led in Algeria, was in fact to establish and institutionalize a collective sociological practice based on a habitus shared by all those involved in the activities he instigated.

Key Words: epistemology • habitus • social theory

Theory, Culture & Society, Vol. 23, No. 6, 25-43 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0263276406069774


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