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Habitus

Habitus is a concept in sociology and anthropology used to describe the system of durable, transposable dispositions through which individuals perceive, judge, and act in the social world. It encompasses tastes, bodily comportment, and practical knowledge—patterns of thought and behavior that are internalized in long-standing social conditions from family, class, and cultural upbringing. The term was introduced by Pierre Bourdieu to explain how social structures are embodied and reproduced in everyday practice.

It is not a set of conscious rules but a pre-reflective orientation that shapes choices and actions

Habitus is intimately linked to the concept of field, a social arena with its own rules, actors,

Critics argue that the concept risks determinism or essentialism if overextended, and that it is difficult

without
requiring
deliberate
calculation.
Habitus
is
durable,
tending
to
persist
across
different
contexts,
yet
it
is
not
fixed;
it
is
malleable
enough
to
adapt
when
agents
encounter
new
fields
of
activity,
such
as
transitions
from
school
to
work.
It
is
often
described
as
both
the
product
of
structure
and
a
resource
for
action:
it
mediates
between
objective
social
conditions
and
individual
agency.
and
forms
of
capital
(economic,
cultural,
social).
The
dispositions
of
habitus
influence
how
individuals
navigate
fields,
construct
taste,
and
reproduce
or
challenge
social
arrangements.
Because
it
is
primarily
unconscious
and
embodied,
habitus
can
contribute
to
social
reproduction
through
seemingly
natural
practices
while
also
giving
room
for
creativity
and
change
through
new
experiences.
to
measure
empirically.
Despite
criticisms,
habitus
remains
influential
in
studies
of
class,
education,
culture,
and
identity,
offering
a
framework
to
analyze
the
interplay
between
structure
and
agency
without
reducing
either
to
the
other.