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Return to Reflexivity (eBook)

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2024
103 Seiten
Polity (Verlag)
978-1-5095-6293-0 (ISBN)

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Return to Reflexivity - Pierre Bourdieu
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This slim volume contains four little-known texts by Pierre Bourdieu on the question of reflexivity, which was a key theme in his work. 

For Bourdieu, reflexivity was not an exercise in introspection but rather a way of applying the tools of sociology to itself.  The aim is to make explicit and control the effects of the presuppositions, standpoints and dispositions that the researcher brings to the conduct of social science research.  Bourdieu advocates an attitude of epistemological vigilance that helps to uncover the invisible effects of the social determinants that weigh on the researcher, effects that are difficult to perceive by the mere desire to be lucid.  Questioning the social position and presuppositions of the researcher at every opportunity loosens the hold of scholastic and other biases on the outcome of research.

By clarifying and illustrating the principles of reflexivity, the four texts in this volume lay the groundwork for the kind of reflexive social science that Bourdieu practised and advocated throughout his career.

Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) was one of the most influential sociologists and anthropologists of the late twentieth century. He was Professor of Sociology at the Collège de France and Director of Studies at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales.  His many works include Outline of a Theory of PracticeDistinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of TasteThe Rules of ArtThe Logic of Practice and Pascalian Meditations.

Introduction
From epistemological vigilance to reflexivity


The demand for reflexivity, which has come to be accepted as a key principle for the human and social sciences, is one of the major contributions made by Pierre Bourdieu’s work. Although all of his work bears the hallmark of a reflexive practice of research, he came to use the word itself rather late in the day. His systematic reflection on the research he was engaged in, designed to scientifically objectify his own scientific practice, was a disposition that preceded, and probably facilitated, his various intellectual innovations, including his concept of reflexivity.

Spurning the bureaucratic model of research as a mechanical application of standardized methods, Bourdieu started his career with fieldwork in wartime Algeria. These exceptional conditions were incompatible with ordinary research work, unless the researcher were to cast a reflexive gaze back onto precisely this extraordinary context, in order to register its impact on the object of research and the researcher himself. So that when Bourdieu took his native Béarn as his object of study, it paradoxically obeyed the same logic: he set out this familiar but fast-changing terrain as a mirror of Algeria, following a reflexive practice that made it possible to verify the impact of the social world on the observer. This concern to objectify and control the relationship between the observer and his object also informed the various investigations he undertook and (co)directed at the Centre de sociologie européenne (CSE), where he was recruited by his director of studies, Raymond Aron, in 1961.1

To understand Bourdieu’s sense of reflexivity, we should go back to his early research. His first investigations were characterized by the fact that nothing came easily: none of the criteria for normal research work were satisfied. In the circumstances, the usual procedures of ethnographic or statistical research were almost impossible to apply, nor were the techniques he had acquired as a trainee philosopher much help. The context of Algeria’s War of Independence, involving extreme danger and emergencies, provoked a ‘permanent practical reflexivity’ as a condition of survival as much as a method of research.2 This led Bourdieu to mount a collective enterprise, with a team of investigators and researchers who drew on their diverse forms of involvement with Algerian reality. This very diversity was rich in assets, but these needed to be co-ordinated and organized, exploiting a variety of survey methods (observations, interviews, and statistical analysis) and academic resources (blurring the boundaries between anthropology, sociology, and labour economics, for example). These various scientific and managerial procedures were guided by a reflexive approach that came to typify all of his subsequent projects. This approach, which is explained explicitly in Travail et travailleurs en Algérie (1963),3 was explored and elaborated on as his work progressed.

The research in Béarn, begun in 1959, appears to be an essential complement to the Algerian work then in progress. It deals with social upheavals of a completely different nature and is situated in a radically different universe, one close to Bourdieu’s heart, the childhood village that he had left when he was still young to attend boarding school at the lycée in Pau. These studies, later collected in The Bachelors’ Ball (2002), focus on peasant celibacy and the crisis facing peasant families.4 They represent an acid test for these early experiments in research and provide a conclusive justification of the Algerian studies. In his self-analysis, Bourdieu describes his study of Béarn as the ‘occasion and the operator of a veritable conversion’:5

The word is, no doubt, not too strong to describe the transformation, at once intellectual and affective, that led me from the phenomenology of emotional life [the initial theme of his thesis project] [. . .] to a scientific practice implying a vision of the social world that was both more distanced and more realistic.6

In launching this twofold enterprise, Bourdieu confronted the many problems arising, not so much as technical or theoretical questions, nor even as ethical or political issues, but first and foremost in a reflexive mode. In The Craft of Sociology (1968), co-authored with Jean-Claude Chamboredon and Jean-Claude Passeron, this attitude is still referred to as ‘epistemological vigilance’.7 Instead of relying on logical techniques, as advocated by some philosophers of science, or on the ‘methodology’ of sociologists, such as Paul Lazarsfeld, it encourages the objectification of the (social) conditions of possibility of research, which depend on the generic positions of the researchers and the characteristics of their personal social trajectories. This approach requires the use of social science techniques in order to better understand and master the research in progress, its obstacles and perspectives, as well as the dispositions that researchers unwittingly deploy in their work.

This understanding of reflexivity does not imply an exercise in introspection designed to overcome some kind of lack of personal self-knowledge. Perhaps this is why Bourdieu initially preferred to speak of ‘epistemological vigilance’ instead of ‘reflexivity’, a term that he started to use more frequently only from the 1980s.8

The attitude of epistemological vigilance is grounded in the need to dispel the denial or ignorance of the effects of researchers’ characteristics on their activity: a blindness based on the illusion of a personal talent for lucidity, which is the first obstacle to a relationship with the world conducive to sociological objectification. But even when subjecting themselves to an analysis of their unique personality and experience, researchers cannot escape the perceptual biases that are social. It is only by trying to take account of all the social mechanisms that construct the human person, including their belief in their uniqueness as an individual, that researchers can hope to gain some control over the effect that these can have on any attempt to represent the social world.

This perspective consists in ‘objectifying the subject of objectification’, that is, deploying ‘all the available instruments of objectification (statistical surveys, ethnographic observation, historical research, etc.) in order to bring to light the presuppositions it owes to its inclusion in the object of knowledge’.9 The assumptions are of three kinds. First, the most accessible are those associated with the subject’s position in the public arena, the particular trajectory that led to it, and their social origin and gender. Next come those that constitute the doxa specific to each of the different fields of intellectual production (religious, artistic, philosophical, etc.) and, more precisely, those that each individual scholar owes to their position in their own particular field. Finally, and even more profoundly, there are assumptions related to skholè, namely leisure, distance from the demands and crises of the world. As a condition underlying the existence of all scholarly fields, skholè, along with the ‘scholastic vision’ that it engenders, is the most complicated to apprehend and manage for those who are immersed in universes where it is taken for granted.10

In order to perform reflexivity as Bourdieu conceives it, it is not sufficient to confront these three orders of assumption by making them explicit. For Bourdieu, reflexivity is less an act of attaining conscious awareness, however painstakingly, than an effort to achieve a practical mastery of the social unconscious that inhabits every one of us, along with the effects of the social determinants that weigh on us, invisible effects that the mere will to be lucid is insufficient to detect. Since it is not enough to be aware of the existence of these determinants in the abstract to limit their impact, one way of succeeding is to vary their scope. Awareness can be liberating, as long as we engage with the actual conditions needed for this liberation. A characteristic example of the concrete application of reflexivity for Bourdieu was when he undertook in Béarn the type of investigation that he had carried out in Algeria, enabling him to take into account empirically the effects of distance or proximity generated by the study of a foreign or a familiar society. This procedure determines the way he uses an ‘informant’ and analyses their nature. In an investigation, informants are always involved in staging themselves and their universe, especially in the presence of a stranger. Far from accepting their point of view as gospel, we must question the social position of the speaker at every turn, and the particular social relationship they entertain with the person questioning them, in order to identify the grains of truth contained in their discourse. This also implies paying attention to the use of technical equipment, such as the tape recorder or the camera, as well as the social composition of the research team11 – in short, the whole range of the mental or technical faculties that the researcher mobilizes in the survey without realizing that they can help to determine results.

Among the obstacles to scientific knowledge, there is, rather paradoxically, the very fact of...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 15.10.2024
Übersetzer Peter Collier
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Allgemeines / Lexika
Schlagworte Appropriation • Art of Living • Bias • epistemological vigilance • Fieldwork • Habitus • how can reflexivity help research • is reflexivity a type of introspection • Methodology • objectivation • Objectivity • Pedagogy • perception • reflexivity • Research • research tools • scholastic bias • scientific practice • self • Social conditions • socio-analysis • sociologist • Sociology • Speaker • what did Bourdieu advocate in the practice of sociology • what is reflexivity? what is reflexive sociology
ISBN-10 1-5095-6293-1 / 1509562931
ISBN-13 978-1-5095-6293-0 / 9781509562930
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