cultural capital
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Calque of French capital culturel, coined by French sociologists Pierre Bourdieu and Jean-Claude Passeron (1970).
Noun
[edit]cultural capital (uncountable)
- (sociology) The social assets of a person, such as education, intellect, style of speech or dress, etc. that promote social mobility.
- Coordinate terms: economic capital, human capital, political capital, social capital, sexual capital
- 2007, Tim Edwards, Cultural Theory, SAGE, →ISBN, page 265:
- If you like: if economic capital is what you have, cultural capital is what you know, social capital is whom you know. […] Unless educational resources make some attempt to reverse the flow of cultural capital transmitted in the home then the end result will be enhanced forms of cultural inequality.
- 2020, Emily Segal, Mercury Retrograde, New York: Deluge Books, →ISBN:
- […] I had an excess of cultural capital and a lack of actual capital; […]
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]assets
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Further reading
[edit]- cultural capital on Wikipedia.Wikipedia