Teenage time use as investment in cultural capital

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Abstract

In this chapter, cultural capital is examined in a wider context alongside its relationship with the other capitals defined by Bourdieu. While cultural capital is theoretically convertible into other forms of capital, the overwhelming majority of previous research focuses on its relationship with childhood school achievement. I suggest that the more attention be given to the relationship that cultural capital has with economic and social capital and the causal mechanisms by which it is thought to act. Next, I propose a measure in which the metaphor of investment implied in the term capital is recognised. The availability of time diaries from the British Cohort Study of 1970 provides an invaluable source of information regarding how British youth spent their leisure at age 16. Empirical analysie examine the effect of teenage cultural capital investment on economic capital and social capital outcomes in adulthood. The chapter ends with a discussion of the results, addressing some fundamental shortcomings in previous cultural capital research which have been identified by previous researchers and which this study has attempted to either address or improve upon. © 2009 Springer Netherlands.

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APA

Robson, K. (2009). Teenage time use as investment in cultural capital. In Quantifying Theory: Pierre Bourdieu (pp. 105–116). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9450-7_8

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