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All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Gartman, David, 1950– Culture, class, and critical theory : between Bourdieu and the Frankfurt school / by David Gartman. p. cm. — (Routledge studies in social and political thought ; 78) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Critical theory. 2. Culture. 3. Bourdieu, Pierre, 1930–2002. 4. Frankfurt school of sociology. 5. Sociology. I. Title. HM480.G36 2012 306dc23 2012020063 ISBN: 978-0-415-52420-9 (hbk) ISBN: 978-0-203-08081-8 (ebk) Typeset in Sabon by IBT Global. To my teachers Randall Collins and Joseph Gus(cid:2) eld who provided not only an excellent education but also an exemplar of intellectual commitment and integrity Contents Preface xi Acknowledgments xiii 1 Modern Culture as Mass Unity or Ranked Diversity 1 2 Reifi cation of Consumer Products: A General History Illustrated by the American Automobile 12 3 Culture as Class Symbolization or Mass Reifi cation? A Critique of Bourdieu’s Distinction 33 4 Three Ages of the Automobile: The Cultural Logics of the Car 54 5 Why Modern Architecture Emerged in Europe, Not America: The New Class and the Aesthetics of Technocracy 79 6 Bourdieu’s Theory of Cultural Change: Explication, Application, Critique 102 7 Bourdieu and Adorno: Converging Theories of Culture and Inequality 131 References 167 Index 175 Preface The essays collected in this book were written over the course of twenty-fi ve years of empirical research in the sociology of culture. They were forged by the practical problems of making sense of two artifacts of material cul- ture—the automobile and architecture. This does not mean, however, that these theoretical ideas emerged wholly out of the empirical data, as the advocates of grounded theory suggest. I began my cultural studies with preconceived theoretical notions of how culture legitimates social inequal- ity, drawn largely from the Frankfurt School of critical theory. However, the discrepancies and inconsistencies of my specifi c cases, as well as general trends in sociology as a whole, eventually led me to the powerful cultural theory of Pierre Bourdieu. I was initially critical of his theory of culture as class distinction, because it did not seem to be a good fi t for the empirical case that occupied my attention at the time—the history of American auto- mobile design. The aesthetics of cars seemed to legitimate social inequality by obscuring class diff erences, not by symbolizing these diff erences and making some classes seem superior to others, as Bourdieu claims. But my research in the history of modern architecture soon led me to recognize the validity of Bourdieu’s approach, and forced me to think about how the validity of the two theories vary by both historical period and type of cul- ture, i.e., material and nonmaterial. Out of these empirical problems and specifi cations, I struggled to develop a unifi ed critical theory of culture, one that took into account the insights of both Bourdieu and the Frankfurt School. This task was facilitated by the vicissitudes of Bourdieu’s theory over the course of some forty years. Although he never explicitly acknowledged revising his theory, it is clear that in the late 1980s he reversed himself on such importance issues as the validity of Kant’s theory of aesthetics. It seems that his increasing political involvement in the European movement against neoliberal economic poli- cies led him to embrace Kant’s standard of disinterestedness as a bulwark against the subordination of culture to the market’s standard of profi tabil- ity. This politically motivated shift in his cultural theory brought him in line with the Frankfurt School, which also argued that critical culture must be autonomous from the market. So the integration of these two theories xii Preface was implicitly initiated by Bourdieu himself. My task then became to make this explicit. For assistance and encouragement over the course of the evolution of my thinking I acknowledge the editors and referees of the journals in which these essays fi rst appeared: The American Journal of Sociology, Theory and Society, Theory, Culture and Society, and Sociological Theory. They pushed me in the right direction, even though I did not initially realize it. My colleague Douglas Marshall often served as my primary interlocutor about these issues. Even when we disagreed, his comments were insightful. David Swartz has also been central in molding and correcting my ideas on Bourdieu, as well as off ering advice on the structure of the book. Finally, I feel compelled to acknowledge an intellectual and personal debt long in arrears to the teachers most infl uential on my development as a sociologist. I abjure use of the more popular term, “mentor,” not merely because of its clichéd overuse but also because of its paternalistic implica- tions. Randall Collins and Joseph Gusfi eld did not “take me under their wings,” nor protect this fl edgling intellectual from the slings and arrows of academic contention. They educated me, giving me the knowledge to hold my own in the academic arena. Joseph Gusfi eld taught me to see beneath the superfi cial issues of social contention to the symbolic dimension, where people express, often unconsciously, the aspirations and fears behind their actions. That I have become a cultural sociologist is largely attributable to him. Randall Collins taught me to see society as an arena of complex and imbricated contests, in which even seemingly innocent actions have impli- cations for who gets what. If recently his confl ict sociology has become less cynical by discovering the inherent potential for human solidarity in all interactions, this only serves for me to highlight by contrast the injustice of many existing arrangements. In addition to the specifi c insights that my teachers transmitted, they also provided me with an exemplar of commit- ted intellectual eff ort. Watching them go about their work of educating stu- dents, conducting research, and contributing to a university and a discipline with a serious and committed, yet joyful attitude inspired me to follow in their footsteps. It is to you, Randy and Joe, whom I dedicate my eff orts here, in the hope that I have not fallen too far short of your example.
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