In his seminal work La Domination masculine (1998), French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu explores the deep-rooted social structures that perpetuate gender inequality. He argues that male dominance is not a biological inevitability but a social construction that has been "naturalized" over millennia. 💡 Key Conceptual Frameworks
: Gender is a "sexually characterized habitus"—a set of deeply embedded dispositions in the body (somatization) that dictate how individuals walk, look, and act. La Domination masculine
Bourdieu identifies several key social "machines" that reproduce this order across generations: Pierre Bourdieu's Masculine Domination - Project MUSE In his seminal work La Domination masculine (1998),
Bourdieu uses his core sociological toolkit to explain how gender power dynamics operate: La Domination masculine
: Bourdieu uses his ethnographic research of the Kabyle people in Algeria as a "limit case" to reveal how male/female oppositions (dry/wet, high/low, outside/inside) structure an entire worldview. 🏛️ The Role of Institutions
In his seminal work La Domination masculine (1998), French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu explores the deep-rooted social structures that perpetuate gender inequality. He argues that male dominance is not a biological inevitability but a social construction that has been "naturalized" over millennia. 💡 Key Conceptual Frameworks
: Gender is a "sexually characterized habitus"—a set of deeply embedded dispositions in the body (somatization) that dictate how individuals walk, look, and act.
Bourdieu identifies several key social "machines" that reproduce this order across generations: Pierre Bourdieu's Masculine Domination - Project MUSE
Bourdieu uses his core sociological toolkit to explain how gender power dynamics operate:
: Bourdieu uses his ethnographic research of the Kabyle people in Algeria as a "limit case" to reveal how male/female oppositions (dry/wet, high/low, outside/inside) structure an entire worldview. 🏛️ The Role of Institutions