Cultural capital
 
>From Wikipedia

 
The term cultural  capital refers to non-financial  social assets that 
promote _social  mobility_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_mobility)  
beyond economic means. Examples can  include education, intellect, style of 
speech, dress, or physical  appearance. 
Cultural capital (_French_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_language) 
: le  capital culturel) is a _sociological_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology)  concept that has gained widespread  
popularity since it was first 
articulated by _Pierre  Bourdieu_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Bourdieu) . Bourdieu and _Jean-Claude 
Passeron_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Claude_Passeron)  first used the term in 
"Cultural  Reproduction and 
Social Reproduction" (1977). In this work he attempted to  explain differences 
in children's outcomes in France during the 1960s. It has  since been 
elaborated and developed in terms of other types of capital in The Forms of 
Capital (1986); and in terms of higher  education, for instance, in The  State 
Nobility (1996). For  Bourdieu, capital acts as a social relation within a 
system of exchange, and the  term is extended 'to all the goods material and 
symbolic, without distinction,  that present themselves as rare and worthy of 
being sought after in a particular  social formation (cited in Harker, 
1990:13) and cultural capital acts as a  social relation within a system of 
exchange that includes the accumulated  cultural knowledge that confers power 
and 
status._[1]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-1)
 


 
 
 
 
 
Relation to  other types of capital
In The Forms of  Capital (1986), Bourdieu  distinguishes between three 
types of capital: 
    *   _Economic  capital_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_(economics)) : command over economic 
resources (cash,  assets). 
    *   _Social  capital_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_capital) : 
resources based on group membership,  relationships, networks of influence 
and support. Bourdieu described social  capital as "the aggregate of the 
actual or potential resources which are  linked to possession of a durable 
network of more or less institutionalized  relationships of mutual acquaintance 
and recognition." 
    *   Cultural capital: forms of knowledge, skills,  education, and 
advantages that a person has, which give them a higher status  in society. 
Parents provide their children with cultural capital by  transmitting the 
attitudes and knowledge needed to succeed in the current  educational system.
Later he adds _symbolic  capital_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_capital)  (resources available to an 
individual  on the basis of honor, 
prestige or recognition) to this list. 
Types
Cultural capital has three subtypes: embodied, objectified and  
institutionalised (Bourdieu, 1986:47). Bourdieu distinguishes between these  
three 
types of capital: 
    *   Embodied cultural capital consists of both the  consciously 
acquired and the passively "inherited" properties of one's self  (with 
"inherited" 
here used not in the genetic sense but in the sense of  receipt over time, 
usually from the family through _socialization_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialization) , of culture and traditions).  
Cultural capital is not 
transmissible instantaneously like a gift or bequest;  rather, it is acquired 
over time as it impresses itself upon one's _habitus_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitus_(sociology))  (character and way of 
thinking),  which in turn 
becomes more attentive to or primed to receive similar  influences.  
    *   Linguistic capital, defined as the mastery of and relation  to 
language (Bourdieu, 1990:114), can be understood as a form of embodied  
cultural 
capital in that it represents a means of communication and  
self-presentation acquired from one's surrounding  culture.
    *   Objectified cultural capital consists of physical  objects that are 
owned, such as scientific instruments or works of art. These  cultural 
goods can be transmitted both for economic profit (as by buying and  selling 
them with regard only to others' willingness to pay) and for the  purpose of 
"symbolically" conveying the cultural capital whose acquisition  they 
facilitate. However, while one can possess objectified cultural capital  by 
owning a 
painting, one can "consume" the painting (understand its cultural  meaning) 
only if one has the proper foundation of conceptually and/or  historically 
prior cultural capital, whose transmission does not accompany the  sale of 
the painting (except coincidentally and through independent causation,  such 
as when a vendor or broker chooses to explain the painting's significance  
to the prospective buyer). 
    *   Institutionalized cultural capital consists of  institutional 
recognition, most often in the form of academic credentials or  qualifications, 
of the cultural capital held by an individual. This concept  plays its most 
prominent role in the labor market, in which it allows a wide  array of 
cultural capital to be expressed in a single qualitative and  quantitative 
measurement (and compared against others' cultural capital  similarly 
measured). 
The institutional recognition process thereby eases the  conversion of 
cultural capital to economic capital by serving as a _heuristic_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heuristic)  that sellers can use to describe  
their capital 
and buyers can use to describe their needs for that  capital.
Relation to Bourdieu's other concepts
The concept of cultural capital is fundamentally linked to the concepts  of 
fields and _habitus_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habitus_(sociology)) . 
These three concepts have been  continually developed throughout all of 
Bourdieu's work. A field can be any  structure of social relations (King, 
2005:223). It is a site of struggle for  positions within that field and is 
constituted by the conflict created when  individuals or groups endeavor to 
establish what comprises valuable and  legitimate capital within that space. 
Therefore, one type of cultural capital  can be at the same time both 
legitimate 
and not, depending on the field in which  it is located. It can be seen 
therefore, that the legitimation of a particular  type of cultural capital is 
completely arbitrary. The power to arbitrarily  determine what constitutes 
legitimate cultural capital within a specific field  is derived from symbolic 
capital. 
Habitus is also important to the concept of cultural capital, as much of  
cultural capital can be derived from an individual's habitus. It is often  
defined as being dispositions that are inculcated in the family but manifest  
themselves in different ways in each individual. (Harker, 1990:10; Webb,  
2002:37; Gorder, 1980:226). It is formed not only by the habitus of the family 
 (Harker et al., 1990:11) but also by the objective chances of the class to 
which  the individual belongs (King, 2005:222), in their daily interactions 
(Gorder,  1980:226) and it changes as the individual's position within a 
field changes  (Harker, 1990:11). 
Use  of the concept in theory and research
The concept of cultural capital has received widespread attention all  
around the world, from theorists and researchers alike. It is mostly employed 
in 
 relation to the education system, but on the odd occasion has been used or 
 developed in other discourses. Use of Bourdieu's cultural capital can be 
broken  up into a number of basic categories. First, are those who explore 
the theory as  a possible means of explanation or employ it as the framework 
for their  research. Second, are those who build on or expand Bourdieu's 
theory. Finally,  there are those who attempt to disprove Bourdieu's findings 
or 
to discount them  in favour of an alternative theory. The majority of these 
works deal with  Bourdieu's theory in relation to education, only a small 
number apply his theory  to other instances of inequality in society. 
Traditional use of  concept
Those researchers and theorists who explore or employ Bourdieu's theory  
use it in a similar way as it was articulated by Bourdieu. They usually apply 
it  uncritically,, and depending on the measurable indicators of cultural 
capital  and the fields within which they measure it, Bourdieu's theory either 
works to  support their argument totally, or in a qualified way.. These 
works to help  portray the usefulness of Bourdieu's concept in analysing 
(mainly educational)  inequality but they do not add anything to the theory. 
One work which does employ Bourdieu's work in an enlightening way is that  
of Emirbayer & Williams (2005) who use Bourdieu's notion of fields and  
capital to examine the power relations in the field of social services,  
particularly homeless shelters. The authors talk of the two separate fields 
that  
operate in the same geographic location (the shelter) and the types of 
capital  that are legitimate and valued in each. Specifically they show how 
homeless  people can possess "staff-sanctioned capital" or "client-sanctioned 
capital"  (2005:92) and show how in the shelter, they are both at the same 
time, 
desirable  and undesirable, valued and disparaged, depending on which of 
the two fields  they are operating in. Although the authors do not clearly 
define  staff-sanctioned and client-sanctioned capital as cultural capital, and 
state  that usually the resources that form these two capitals are gathered 
from a  person's life as opposed to their family, it can be seen how 
Bourdieu's theory  of cultural capital can be a valuable theory in analysing 
inequality in any  social setting. 
Expansion of  concept
A number of works expand Bourdieu's theory of cultural capital in a  
beneficial manner, without deviating from Bourdieu's framework of the different 
 
forms of capital. In fact, these authors can be seen to explore unarticulated 
 areas of Bourdieu's theory as opposed to constructing a new theory. For  
instance, Stanton-Salazar & Dornbusch (1995:121) examine how those people  
with the desired types of cultural (and linguistic) capital in a school  
transform this capital into "instrumental relations" or social capital with  
institutional agents who can transmit valuable resources to the person,  
furthering their success in the school. They state that this is simply an  
elaboration of Bourdieu's theory. Similarly, Dumais (2002) introduces the  
variable 
of gender to determine the ability of cultural capital to increase  
educational achievement. The author shows how gender and social class interact  
to 
produce different benefits from cultural capital. In fact in Distinction  
(1984:107), Bourdieu states "sexual properties are as inseparable from class  
properties as the yellowness of lemons is inseparable from its acidity". He  
simply did not articulate the differences attributable to gender in his 
general  theory of _reproduction_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_reproduction)  in the education system. 
On the other hand, two authors have introduced new variables into  
Bourdieu's concept of cultural capital. Emmison & Frow's (1998) work centers  
on an 
exploration of the ability of Information Technology to be considered a  
form of cultural capital. The authors state that "a familiarity with, and a  
positive disposition towards the use of bourgeoisie technologies of the  
information age can be seen as an additional form of cultural capital  
bestowing 
_advantage on those families that possess them_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_divide) ".  Specifically computers are 
"machines" (Bourdieu, 
1986:47) that form a type of  objectified cultural capital, and the ability to 
use them is an embodied type of  cultural capital. This work is useful 
because it shows the ways in which  Bourdieu's concept of cultural capital can 
be 
expanded and updated to include  cultural goods and practices which are 
progressively more important in  determining achievement both in the school and 
without. 
Hage uses Bourdieu's theory of cultural capital to explore  
multiculturalism and racism in Australia. His discussion around race is 
distinct  from 
Bourdieu's treatment of migrants and their amount of linguistic capital and  
habitus. Hage actually conceives of "whiteness" (in Dolby, 2000:49) as being a  
form of cultural capital. 'White' is not a stable, biologically determined  
trait, but a "shifting set of social practices" (Dolby, 2000:49). He  
conceptualizes the nation as a circular field, with the hierarchy moving from  
the powerful center (composed of 'white' Australians) to the less powerful  
periphery (composed of the 'others'). The 'others' however are not simply  
dominated, but are forced to compete with each other for a place closer to the  
centre. This use of Bourdieu's notion of capital and fields is extremely  
illuminating to understand how people of non-Anglo ethnicities may try and  
exchange the cultural capital of their ethnic background with that of  
'whiteness' to gain a higher position in the hierarchy. It is especially useful 
 
to see it in these terms as it exposes the arbitrary nature of what is  
"Australian", and how it is determined by those in the dominant position 
(mainly  
'white' Australians). In a path-breaking study, Bauder (2006) uses the 
notions  of habitus and cultural capital to explain the situation of migrants 
in 
the  labor market and society. 
John Taylor Gatto writes a piece in Harper's issue in 2003, Against School. 
Gatto addresses  issues over education in modern schooling as a retired 
school teacher. The  relation of cultural capital can be linked to Alexander 
Inglis's 1918 book, Principles of Secondary  Education, which makes clear  how 
modern American schooling is now what it had been for Prussia in the 1820s. 
 The objective was to divide children into sections by distributing 
children into  subjects by age groups and common test scores. Inglis introduces 
six 
basic  functions for modern schooling. Functions three four and five are 
most related  to cultural capital because they describe the manner in which 
schooling enforces  children's cultural capital from a young age. Below are 
functions three to five  from Gatto's issue: 3. The diagnostic and directive 
function. School is meant to  determine each student's proper social role. 
This is done by logging evidence  mathematically and anecdotally on cumulative 
records. 4. The differentiating  function. Once their social role has been 
"diagnosed," children are to be sorted  by role and trained only as far as 
their destination in the social machine  merits—and not one step further. 5. 
The selective function. This refers not to  human choice at all but to 
Darwin's theory of natural selection as applied to  what he called "the favored 
races." In short, the idea is to help things along  by consciously attempt to 
improve the breeding stock. Schools are meant to tag  the unfit—with poor 
grades, remedial placement, and other punishments clearly  enough that their 
peers will accept them as inferior and effectively bar them  from the 
reproductive sweepstakes. That's what all those little humiliations  from first 
grade onward were intended to do: "it was the dirt down the drain."  These 
three functions are directly related to cultural capital because through  
schooling children are discriminated by social class and cognitively placed 
into  
the destination that will make them fit to sustain that social role as they 
 grow. They will be led down the path into the class they will belong to 
and  during the fifth function will be directly undesirable to the more 
privileged  set of children and be even furthermore pushed down the ladder. 
Also, Paul DiMaggio expands on Bourdieu's view on cultural capital and  its 
influence on education saying: "Following Bourdieu, I measure high school  
students' cultural capital using self-reports of involvement in art, music, 
and  literature." In his journal article titled Cultural Capital and School 
Success:  The Impact of Status Culture Participation on the Grades of U.S. 
High School  Students in the American  Sociological Review._[2]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-2)
  
In the US, Richard A. Peterson and A Simkus (1992) extended the cultural  
capital theory, exclusively on (secondary) analysis of survey data on 
Americans,  in 'How musical tastes mark occupational status groups', with the 
term 
"cultural  omnivores" as a particular higher status section in the US that 
has broader  cultural engagements and tastes spanning an eclectic range from 
_highbrow_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highbrow)  arts to _popular  
culture_ (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popular_culture) ._[3]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-3)
  
Originally, it was Peterson (1992) who  coined the term 'cultural omnivore' to 
address an anomaly observed in the  evidence revealed by his work with Simkus 
(Peterson and Simkus, 1992) which  showed that people of higher social 
status, contrary to elite-mass models of  cultural taste developed by French 
scholars with French data, were not averse to  participation in activities 
associated with popular culture._[4]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-4)
  The work rejected the 
universal  adaptation of the cultural capital theory, especially in the 20th 
century in  advanced post-industrialist societies like the United States._[5]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_
note-5)  
Criticisms of  concept
Criticisms of Bourdieu's concept have been made on many grounds,  including 
a lack of conceptual clarity._[6]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-6)
  Perhaps due to this lack of 
clarity,  researchers have operationalised the concept in diverse ways, and 
have varied in  their conclusions. While some researchers may be criticised 
for using measures  of cultural capital which focus only on certain aspects 
of 'highbrow' culture,  this is a criticism which could also be leveled at 
Bourdieu's own work. Several  studies have attempted to refine the 
measurement of cultural capital, in order  to examine which aspects of 
middle-class 
culture actually have value in the  education system._[7]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-7)
 _[8]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#ci
te_note-8) _[9]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-9)
 _[10]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-10)
  
It has been observed that Bourdieu's theory, and in particular his notion  
of habitus, is entirely deterministic, leaving no place for individual 
agency or  even individual consciousness._[11]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-11)
 _[12]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-12)
  
Although Bourdieu claimed to have  transcended the dichotomy of structure 
and agency, this is not necessarily  convincing. For example, the Oxford 
academic John Goldthorpe has long argued  that: 
Bourdieu's view of the transmission of cultural capital as a key  process 
in social reproduction is simply wrong. And the more detailed findings  of 
the research, as noted above, could then have been taken as helping to  
explain just why it is wrong. That is, because differing class conditions do  
not 
give rise to such distinctive and abiding forms of habitus as Bourdieu  
would suppose; because even within more disadvantaged classes, with little  
access to high culture, values favouring education may still prevail and  
perhaps some relevant cultural resources exist; and because, therefore,  
schools 
and other educational institutions can function as important agencies  of 
re-socialisation – that is, can not only underwrite but also in various  
respects complement, compensate for or indeed counter family influences in the  
creation and transmission of "cultural capital", and not just in the case of  
Wunderkinder but in fact on a mass scale._[13]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-13)
 
Bourdieu has also been criticised for his lack of consideration of  gender. 
Kanter (in Robinson & Garnier, 1986) point out the lack of interest  in 
gender inequalities in the labour market in Bourdieu's work. However,  Bourdieu 
addressed the topic of gender head-on in his 2001 book Masculine 
Domination. Bourdieu  stated on the first page of the prelude in this book that 
he 
considered  masculine domination to be a prime example of _symbolic  violence_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_violence) ._[14]_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cultural_capital&printable=yes#cite_note-14)
 

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