


The reconciliation of these appears in Bourdieu as a search for convergence between a phenomenological subjectivity and a structuralist objectivity, which has increasingly informed psychosocial projects and approaches.

French social debates verged at the time between Sartre’s existential phenomenology and Lévi-Strauss’s structuralism. Distinction displays the interplay between theory and research as a hallmark of Bourdieu’s approach. The book was published in English in 1984. Originally published in 1979, the study is based on two surveys conducted over the 1960s. It is a major contribution to current debates on the theory of culture and a challenge to the major theoretical schools in contemporary sociology.Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste is Pierre Bourdieu’s best-known book, derived from an empirical exploration of the relationship between cultural taste and social position in France. The topic of Bourdieu’s book is a fascinating one: the strategies of social pretension are always curiously engaging. The social world, he argues, functions simultaneously as a system of power relations and as a symbolic system in which minute distinctions of taste become the basis for social judgment. Bourdieu finds a world of social meaning in the decision to order bouillabaisse, in our contemporary cult of thinness, in the “California sports” such as jogging and cross-country skiing. The different aesthetic choices people make are all distinctions-that is, choices made in opposition to those made by other classes. What emerges from his analysis is that social snobbery is everywhere in the bourgeois world. Bourdieu bases his study on surveys that took into account the multitude of social factors that play a part in a French person’s choice of clothing, furniture, leisure activities, dinner menus for guests, and many other matters of taste. In the course of everyday life people constantly choose between what they find aesthetically pleasing and what they consider tacky, merely trendy, or ugly.

Distinction is at once a vast ethnography of contemporary France and a dissection of the bourgeois mind. France’s leading sociologist focuses here on the French bourgeoisie, its tastes and preferences. Pierre Bourdieu brilliantly illuminates this situation of the middle class in the modern world.
