¶ … status and class and how class uses words to prioritize themselves. The world as we perceive it -- or our reality -- is run according to symbols. It is symbols -- or words - that define that which is socially approved of and also symbols -- and words that peg individuals and groups in particular positions.
Bordeaux argues that the powerful elite have categorized substances, pegged certain values to them, made them correspond with particular symbols and then attached these symbols to certain class structures. These defining words are also grouped in terms of polarities and, so for instance, you have one item that may denote a positive sense whilst it's opposite condemns. These class structures also vary from generation to generation and from country to country. So for instance, a Rolls Royce is actually a vehicle as amongst any other, but the elite (a certain class) attached a certain meaning to the connotation 'Rolls Royce'. They consequently attached this symbol to a certain class of people ("he owns Rolls") and this person in return becomes respected, adulated, placed in a certain social bracket that is distinct from the 'lower' classes. The word defines him and sets him apart. In a similar way, words are used arbitrarily to denigrate and objectify humans, such as 'dame' that may be used for a woman' or more notorious the Black person who was tagged' boy' in the 1950s. 'Boy' was a pejorative term. It tagged the person in a specific class. In other words, Bordeaux maintains that "that all knowledge, and in particular all knowledge of the social world, is an act of construction implementing schemes of thought and expression," and that this system of knowledge represented in words is used to classify groups of people and categorize them into particular classes. Worse still there is a self-reinforcing effect where -- as social psychology shows -- people who are tagged in a certain way tend to see themselves in terms of those particular classifications and tend to actualize them. This is particularly so since "The cognitive structures which social agents implement in their practical knowledge of the social world are internalized, 'embodied' social structures"
Sometimes, words can change the whole experience of a social system, such as 'paternalism' and more often than not in the history of mankind; countries have used words to wage war against particular individuals or classes in order to dominate them. .
This is nothing new. Apparently, rhetoric has long been used in the struggle of class against class, or rather one ruling class against another in order to oppress lower classes. Bourdieu points out that:
Commonplaces and classificatory systems are thus the stake of struggles between the groups they characterize and counterpoise, who fight over them while striving to turn them to their own advantage. Georges Duby shows how the model of the three orders, which fixed a state of the social structure and aimed to make it permanent by codifying it. was able to be used simultaneously and successively by antagonistic groups: first by the bishops, who had devised it, against the heretics, the monks and the knights; then by the aristocracy, against the bishops and the king; and finally by the king, who, by setting himself up as the absolute subject of the classifying operation, as a principle external and superior to the classes it generated (unlike the three orders, who were subjects but also objects, judges but also parties), assigned each group its place in the social order, and established himself as an unassailable vantage-point. (p.35)
People, as Bourdieu says, have long resorted to using words as a tool for oppression. Religion used it -- and uses it -- against heretics; the knights used it against the feudal class; the aristocracy used it against bishops and kings; and then the king employed words as means to subjugate others. Each has been put into certain social groups through the use of words.
Reflection
Bourdieux's...
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