On reductions–examining a British-Bourdieusian sociology of education

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Abstract

In this article I explore a disposition towards a critique of ‘reductionism’ and ‘determinism’ that seems to me to be very much prevalent within British sociology. I take a qualitative educational sociology that uses Bourdieusian concepts as one body of research where this disposition is expressed with particular fervour. A close examination of this work reveals its tacit acceptance of the limits of specific, and mostly statistical, classifications. It also reveals a distorted approach to reflexivity and the view of rival approaches and critiques. This points towards a specific and systematic disposition that, through the abundant warnings of ‘reductionism’ and ‘determinism’, itself reduces the development of a particular theory to a specific epistemology, thereby endangering the potential of rupture and epistemological break advocated by Bourdieu. This prompts us to pose fresh Bourdieusian questions about the state and practice of Bourdieusian reflexivity.

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APA

Winzler, T. (2021). On reductions–examining a British-Bourdieusian sociology of education. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 42(8), 1107–1122. https://doi.org/10.1080/01425692.2021.1990015

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