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2019 | 205 | 1 | 65-84

Article title

Practice Theory Revisited: How Flexible Meta-habit Complements Habitus

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article seeks to understand why it is relatively easy for today’s individuals to acquire new behaviors, how the mechanism behind such acquisition developed, and how it is socially coordinated. Empirical findings reveal that new behaviors are mostly acquired unthinkingly. Hence, revisiting practice theory, I propose the concept of meta-habit to help us understand the blind and automatic acquisition of new behaviors. According to Pierre Bourdieu, habitus acquired primarily in childhood generates practices and contributes to the reproduction of the social order. Meta-habit includes disposal toward being open to situational context, toward inquisitiveness, and toward reading the external clues of behavior. Meta-habit generates practices on the basis of influences in the symbolic community: in this way practices are coordinated socially. Meta-habit is responsible for the reproduction of the social order in situations when the social space is very dynamic-this being the case of late modernity, which is a system comprising myriads of fields.

Year

Volume

205

Issue

1

Pages

65-84

Physical description

Dates

published
2019-03-26

Contributors

  • The Maria Grzegorzewska University

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_26412_psr205_05
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