Think 53: Food Talks: Dan Jurafsky & Yoshiko Matsumoto
Think 53: Food Talks: Dan Jurafsky & Yoshiko Matsumoto
Bourdieu’s Distinction
• family,
• class,
• school,
• political
party,
etc.
All
the
capitals
are
linked
together
“The
volume
of
the
social
capital
possessed
by
a
given
agent
thus
depends
on
the
size
of
the
network
of
connections
he
can
effectively
mobilize
and
on
the
volume
of
the
capital
(economic,
cultural
or
symbolic)
possessed
in
his
own
right
by
each
of
those
to
whom
he
is
connected… [this
network
thus]
exerts
a
multiplier
effect
on
the
capital
he
possesses
in
his
own
right.”
Bourdieu
1986
Habitus
“Habitus
is
a
system
of
dispositions,
that
is
of
permanent
manners
of
being,
seeing,
acting
and
thinking.
Or
a
system
of
long-‐lasting (rather
than
permanent)
schemes
or
schemata
or
structures
of
perception,
conception
and
action”
(Bourdieu
2002,
27-‐28)
“Systems
of
durable,
transposable
dispositions,
structured
structures
predisposed
to
function
as
structuring
structures,
that
is,
as
principles
which
generate
and
organize
practices
and
representations
that
can
be
objectively
adapted
to
their
outcomes
without
presupposing
a
conscious
aiming
at
ends
or
an
express
mastery
of
the
operations
necessary
in
order
to
attain
them”
(Bourdieu
1977,
72).
Habitus
It’s
the
built-‐in,
subconscious
way
that
we
perceive
and
categorize
things
in
the
world,
because
of
how
we
were
raised,
without
knowing
that
we’re
doing
it,
that
structures
our
tastes
and
actions.
Bourdieu’s
question
in
Distinction
What
are
the
“economic
and
social
determinants
of
taste?”
(Distinction,
101)
◦a
question
“which
economists
strangely
ignore”
(p.
101)
Distinction
“Taste
classifies,
and
it
classifies
the
classifier.
Social
subjects,
classified
by
their
classifications,
distinguish
themselves
by
the
distinctions
they
make,
between
the
beautiful
and
the
ugly,
the
distinguished
and
the
vulgar,
in
which
their
position
in
the
objective
classifications
is
expressed
or
betrayed.
And
statistical
analysis
does
indeed
show
that
oppositions
similar
in
structure
to
those
found
in
cultural
practices
also
appear
in
eating
habits.”
(Distinction,
Intro)
Bourdieu’s
claim:
Everyday
tastes
are
not
arbitrary,
but
based
on
power
and
social
status
“esthetic
stances
…
in
cosmetics,
clothing
or
home
decoration
are
opportunities
to
experience
or
assert
ones’
position
in
social
space,
as
a
rank
to
be
upheld,
or
a
distance
to
be
kept”
p.
57.
Johnston
and
Baumann
(2007)
on
Bourdieu:
“the
dominant
classes
affirm
their
high
social
status
through
consumption
of
cultural
forms
consecrated
by
institutions
with
cultural
authority.
Through
family
socialization
and
formal
education,
class-‐bound
tastes
for
legitimate
culture
develop
alongside
aversions
for
unrefined,
illegitimate,
or
popular
culture.”
Bourdieu’s
Homology
Dominant/dominated
class
High/low
culture
Bourdieu
on
Music
preferences
“Legitimized
taste”
Bourdieu
on
1960s
food
preferences
in
France
Working
class:
◦ “the
working
class
meal
is
characterized
by
plenty
…
and
freedom”
◦ Impression
of
abundance,
especially
for
men
◦ Plates
are
filled
twice
◦ Abundant
dishes
brought
to
the
table
◦ Soups,
pastas,
potatoes,
served
with
a
ladle
or
spoon
Bourgeoisie:
◦ Strict
form:
sequencing
of
the
courses
◦ Fish,
meat,
cheese,
dessert
◦ Healthy,
less
fatty
Bourdieu
on
1960s
food
preferences
in
France
Working
class:
◦ Preferences
for
charcuterie,
pork,
pot-‐au-‐feu,
cassoulet,
Clerks,
teachers,
◦ Exoticism:
Italian,
Chinese
cooking,
health
food,
curry
Bourdieu
1960s
French“food space” Executives,
doctors
manual
&
domestic
workers
Bourdieu’s
position
"Curry”
and
"light
meats"
like
beef
are
"legitimized"
Cassoulet and
stews
and
“non-‐light
meats”
like
pork
are
not
This
is
an
arbitrary
distinction
◦ Designed
to
assert/confirm
status/power
Omnivorousness theory
Bourdieu:
homology
between
“high”
culture
and
dominant
class
◦ high
status:
classical
music
◦ low
status:
pop
music
Peterson
&
Kern
alternative:
omnivorousness
◦ High-‐status
cultural
consumption
is
instead
increasingly
“diversified,
inclusive,
or
omnivorous”.
◦ High
status
can
draw
from
many
cultural
forms
◦ Jazz
◦ Hiphop
◦ Bluegrass
◦ Cuban
music
Two
views
of
omnivorousness
Positive:
It’s
different,
more
inclusive,
less
centered
on
one
culture
Negative:
It’s
still
just
another
kind
of
distinction,
still
associated
with
power
Rise
of
omnivorousness in
US
food
1900s:
Fancy
Menus
are
in
French
Flounder
sur le
plat
Eggs
au
beurre noir
Fried
chicken
a
la
Maryland,
half
Green
turtle
a
l’anglaise
Sirloin
steak
aux
champignons
French
chefs
and
cuisine
in
20 century
US
th
Magazines TABLE 1
Usage of Select Discursive Strategies in a Sample of Gourmet Food Articles
% Articles
with at
Total Least One Median Average
Discursive Strategies Usage Usage Usage Usage
Geographic referent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,408 100 10 13.7
Handmade/nonindustrial . . . . . . . . . . 385 89 3 3.8
Organic/naturally raised . . . . . . . . . . . 47 24 0 .5
Personal connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318 92 2 3.1
Historical connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 262 76 1.5 2.6
Rarity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 19 0 .3
“Simple”
preparation
◦ “Top-‐notch
tempura
all
comes
down
to
simple
things
exquisitely
done”
(Saveur,
December
2004,
p.
84).
Non-‐industrial
Harvesting
◦ Farmers
who
handpick
their
potatoes:,
“…doing
things
the
old-‐fashioned
unmechanized way
is
what
[they]
care
about”
(Saveur,
November
2004,
p.
54).
BISON BURGER
8 oz. blue star farms, grass fed & pasture raised,
melted gorgonzola, grilled vegetables