3 resultados para Capital cultural
em Aston University Research Archive
Resumo:
El incremento en la publicación de antologías de poesía española iniciado en el franquismo como proceso de creación de un canon literario alcanza su culminación durante la democracia, sobre todo entre 1995 y 2008. El presente ensayo analiza esa proliferación antológica desde la perspectiva de la política cultural desplegada por los distintos gobiernos democráticos y desde los presupuestos teóricos del capital cultural. Cuestiones tales como los hábitos de lectura, el valor simbólico del libro y de las antologías, y el proceso de canonización de los estamentos académicos, así como de los premios, conforman el eje de este estudio.
Resumo:
The increase in the publication of anthologies of Spanish poetry that had begun during Franco´s dictatorship as a way of creating a literary canon reaches its high point during the democratic period, especially between 1995 and 2008. This essay examines the proliferation of anthologies of contemporary Spanish poetry from 1976 to present from the perspective of the different cultural policies deployed by individual governments and from the theoretical framework of cultural capital. Issues such as reading habits and the symbolic value of books and anthologies, the process of canonization of poets, and poetry prizes, among others, constitute the focus of this study.
Migrant entrepreneurs as cosmopolitan change agents:a Bourdieuan perspective on capital accumulation
Resumo:
Purpose : The aim of this paper is to provide novel insights into how the cosmopolitan mind-set can be fostered at a time of globalization by considering a group of social actors that has received scant attention in the literature on institutional change, notably migrant entrepreneurs. Design/methodology/approach : This is a conceptual study that draws on Bourdieu’s theory of capital to develop a set of testable propositions as to how the economic, cultural, social and symbolic capital endowments of migrant entrepreneurs shape their agency in bringing about cosmopolitan transformation. Findings : Together, migrant entrepreneurs endowed with higher levels of capital may act as institution reformers and promote the cosmopolitan mind-set by influencing the beliefs, incentives and behaviors of those embedded in more entrenched traditional institutions. Research limitations/implications : Our conceptual framework deals with only one of the many agents that may help bring about cosmopolitan change and is particularly well suited to a Western European context. Practical implications This conceptual paper provides a number of testable propositions that can be central to an empirical investigation into how the levels of capital possessed by migrant entrepreneurs affect their engagement in cosmopolitan change. Originality/value : The novelty of this paper lies in the development of a set of propositions that shows how divergent change toward a cosmopolitan vision might be engendered by spatially dispersed actors endowed with varying degrees of economic, cultural, social and symbolic capital.