Bourdieu Peasant and Photography 1 PDF
Bourdieu Peasant and Photography 1 PDF
Bourdieu Peasant and Photography 1 PDF
graphy
Copyright 2004 SAGE Publications (London, Thousand Oaks, CA and New Delhi)
www.sagepublications.com Vol 5(4): 601616[DOI: 10.1177/1466138104050701]
ABSTRACT
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hierarchical and closed society in which the lineage and the house have
more reality than the particular individuals who compose them.
KEY WORDS
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Otherwise there are those who would not have called him in, maybe. But
once hes there, they dont dare say no. Nothing is too expensive on that day.
Buying the photograph is a tribute paid to those who made the invitation. The photograph is the object of rule-governed exchanges; it enters into
the circuit of mandatory gifts and counter-gifts to which weddings and some
other ceremonies give rise. Being an officiant whose presence sanctions the
solemnity of the rite, the official photographer may be shadowed or
seconded by the amateur photographer, but he can never be replaced by
him.4
It is only around 1930 that photographs of first communions began to
appear while photographs of christenings are even more recent and rare.
For the past several years, some peasants have taken advantage of the
photographers presence at the agricultural shows to have their picture
taken with their livestock, but these are a rarity. For christenings, which
never give rise to big ceremonies and only involve close family members,
photography remains exceptional, but the first communion gives many
mothers an opportunity to have a picture taken of their children:5 one
cannot but approve of a mother who acts in this manner, and ever more so
as the importance of children in society increases. In the old peasant society,
a child was never the center of attention, as is the case today. The major
festivals and ceremonies of village life were essentially adult events and it is
only since 1945 that childrens celebrations (Christmas or First
Communion, for example) have become important. As this society devotes
more attention to children and, by the same token, to women as mothers,
so the habit of having the children photographed is reinforced. In the photo
collection of a smallholder of the hamlets (B.M.), portraits of children make
up half of the post-1945 pictures whereas there are hardly any (three, to be
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precise) in the collection for the years prior to 1939. In those days, one
photographed mostly adults, secondarily family groupings combining
parents and children, and only exceptionally children on their own. Now
the opposite is the case. But the photographing of children is itself to a large
extent accepted because it has a social function. The division of labor
between the sexes gives the woman the task of maintaining relations with
members of the group who live at a distance, starting with her own family.
Like letters and better than letters, photographs have a part to play in the
perpetual updating of mutual acquaintance.6 It is customary to take
children (at least once and, if possible, periodically) to visit kin who live
outside the village, and in the first instance the wifes mother when the wife
comes from outside. It is the woman who initiates these journeys and who
sometimes undertakes them without her husband. Sending a photograph
has the same function: through the picture, one presents the new offspring
to the whole group that must recognize him or her.
In this regard, it is understandable that photographs should be the object
of a reading that one may call sociological and that they are never
considered in themselves and for themselves, in terms of their technical or
aesthetic qualities. The photographer is assumed to know his craft and one
has no basis on which to make comparisons. The photograph must simply
provide a representation sufficiently faithful and precise to allow recognition. It is methodically inspected and observed at length, in accordance
with the logic that governs the knowledge of others in everyday life: through
the confrontation of knowledges and experiences, one situates each person
by reference to his lineage and, often, the reading of old photographs takes
the form of a lecture in genealogical science, when the mother, the specialist
in the subject, teaches the child the relationships that link him or her to each
of the persons pictured. But, above all, one inquires to know who attended
the ceremony and how the couples were made up; each familys field of
social relations is analysed; one notes absences, as indicators of quarrels,
and the presences that confer honor. For each guest, the photograph is a
kind of trophy, a sign and source of social significance (You are proud to
show that you were at the wedding, says J.L.). For the families of the
newlywed and for the couple themselves, it testifies to the rank of the family
by recalling the number and quality of the guests: the guests of B.M., son
of a small house in the hamlets, are mainly relatives and neighbors, the
selection principle being traditional, whereas in the wedding photo of J.B.,
a well-off inhabitant of the bourg, one sees the work and school mates of
the groom and even of the bride. In short, the wedding photo is a veritable
sociogram and it is read as such.
The photographing of major ceremonies is possible because and only
because such pictures capture behaviors that are socially approved and
socially regulated, that is to say already solemnized. Nothing may be
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Even today, whereas among the peasants of the hamlets there is currently
only one man, still young and unmarried, who takes photographs, in the
bourg there is a small number of more or less active amateurs. If it is
strongly dependent on income, the practice of photography is manifestly
linked to place of residence through the mediation of the degree to which
one adheres or aspires to urban values. In fact, nothing would be more
mistaken than to claim to explain the rarity of photographic practice in
peasant society by simple negative determinisms. Neither economic barriers,
such as the high cost of the equipment, nor technological barriers, nor even
the low level of information can account for this phenomenon. Peasants use,
and can use, photography strictly as consumers, and then only selectively,
because the system of values of which they partake, whose hub is a certain
image of the accomplished peasant, forbids them to become producers.
If photography is regarded as a luxury, this is first because the peasant
ethos requires that expenditure devoted to enlargement of the heritage or
the modernization of farm equipment take precedence over expenditures on
consumption. More generally, any outlay not sanctioned by tradition is
considered wasteful. But this is not all: innovation is always suspect in the
eyes of the group, and not only in itself, that is, as a denial of tradition.
People are always inclined to see in it an expression of the will to distinguish oneself, to stand out, to dazzle or to put down others. And that is an
affront to the principle that dominates the whole of social existence and has
nothing to do with egalitarianism. In fact, irony, mockery, and gossip have
the function of bringing back into line, that is, into conformity and uniformity, someone who, by his innovative behavior, seems to want to teach
a lesson or throw out a challenge to the whole community. Whether this be
his intention or not, there is no escaping suspicion. By invoking past
experience and calling on all the others to witness, one aims to deny
that the innovation corresponds to a real need. Thence it can only be
ostentatious.
But collective disapproval is graduated according to the nature of the
innovation and the area in which it is introduced. When it concerns agricultural techniques and crop tending, it does not elicit total and brutal
condemnation because, in spite of everything, the innovator is given the
benefit of the doubt: appearances notwithstanding, his behavior may be
inspired by the most praiseworthy motives, namely, the will to increase the
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value of his heritage. In such cases, he betrays the peasant tradition but he
remains a peasant. Moreover, moral condemnation can take the guise of the
skepticism of the technician and of the man of experience: the sanction of
the enterprise will be found in its own results. In any case, because he runs
the risk of failure or ridicule, the innovator commands respect.
By contrast, the community experiences innovation that it suspects to be
shorn of any rational or reasonable justification as a challenge and a
disavowal. This is because, in the manner of a gift that excludes a countergift, ostentatious behavior, or behavior perceived as such, puts the group in
a position of inferiority and can only be experienced as an affront, with
everyone feeling assaulted in his or her self-esteem. In that case, reproof and
repression are immediate and merciless. What is he playing at? Who does
he take himself for? As a sign of status, photographic practice can only be
seen as expressing an effort to rise above ones rank. This will to distinguish
oneself is then countered by a reminder of the common origins: We know
where he came from. His father wore clogs!11
A frivolous luxury, the practice of photography would for a peasant be
a ridiculous barbarism; to indulge in such a fantasy would be rather like a
man taking a stroll along with his wife, on a summer evening, as the
pensioners of the bourg do:
Thats fine for vacationers, those are things of the city. A peasant who would
walk around with a camera hanging over his shoulder would be no more
than a failed monsieur (u moussu manqut). You need delicate hands to
handle those things. And what about the money? Its expensive. All that
paraphernalia costs a bundle! (F.M.)
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These practices, acceptable for young people, are in any case abandoned
from the moment of marriage, which marks a sharp break in the course of
existence: from one day to another, it is over with village balls or outings,
and thus with the photography sometimes associated with them. I stopped
after my honeymoon, says J.B. . . . Now I have plenty of other things to
worry about. And his wife chipped in: Oh, too right, hes got other things
to worry about now. This man, who once took much pride in recounting
his holidays in Biarritz or his visits to Paris, who says that he does not have
the leisure to take photos although he spends a lot of time hunting wood
pigeons, now talks insistently only about his work, the only activity worthy
of a responsible adult man.
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straight at the camera and to take up the pose is the object of disapproval.
He is, as the phrase goes, not really there.
To take part in a photograph is to grant the testimony of ones presence,
which is the mandatory counterpart of the tribute received in being invited;
it testifies that one values the honor of having been invited to take part and
that one takes part in order to give honor.14 How would the arrangement
and posture of the participants not be marks of solemnity? No one would
think of infringing upon the photographers instructions, of talking to his
neighbor, of looking elsewhere. That would be a breach of propriety and
especially an affront to the whole group and, first and foremost, to those
who are chiefly honored on that day, the bridal couple. The proper and
dignified stance consists in standing up straight and looking straight ahead
with the gravity that befits this solemn occasion.
It is not unreasonable to think that the spontaneous search for frontality is linked to the most deeply embedded cultural values.15 In this society
that exalts the sentiment of honor, dignity, and responsibility, this closed
world in which one feels at every moment and without escape the unremitting gaze of others, it is important to present the most honorable image of
oneself to others: the fixed, rigid posture, of which the soldiers standing
to attention is the limiting case, seems to be the expression of this unconscious intention. The axial image, conforming to the principle of frontality,
offers an impression that is as clearly readable as can be, as if one worried
to avoid any misunderstanding or confusion. The same intention manifests
itself in the embarrassment felt by the photographed subject, the concern
to rectify ones posture and to wear ones best clothes, and the instinctive
refusal to be caught in everyday dress, doing everyday things. To take the
proper pose is to respect oneself and to ask for respect. The subject offers
the viewer an act of reverence, of courtesy, that is governed by convention
and requests the viewer to obey the same conventions and the same norms.
He faces up (fait front) and asks to be looked at frontally and from a
distance, this demand for reciprocal deference constituting the essence of
frontality. The photographic portrait thus performs the objectivation of the
self-image. As such, it is simply the limiting case of the relationship with
others.16
Everything takes place as if, by obeying the principle of frontality and
adopting the most conventional posture, one sought to take charge, insofar
as is possible, of the objectification of ones own image. To look at the other
without being seen, without being seen looking and without being looked
at, to steal a glance as the phrase goes, and, moreover, to photograph them
in that way, is to steal the others image. By looking at the person who looks
at me (or photographs me), by arranging my posture, I offer myself to be
looked at as I want to be seen; I give the image of myself that I intend to
give and, quite simply, I give my image. In brief, faced with a gaze that fixes
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and immobilizes appearances, to adopt the most dignified, the most sober
and the most ceremonial attitude, to stand stiffly upright, feet joined
together, arms flat by the sides, in the manner of a soldier standing to attention, is to reduce the risk of awkwardness and clumsiness and to present to
the other a regulated, prepared, primed image: to give a regulated image of
oneself is a way of imposing the rules of ones own perception.
The conventionality of the posture and dress adopted for photographs
would seem to derive from the style of social relations fostered by a society
at once hierarchical and static, in which the lineage and the house have
more reality than the particular individuals who compose them, defined as
they are essentially by the groups they belong to,17 where the social rules
of conduct and the moral code are more manifest than the feelings, the wills,
or the thoughts of singular subjects, where social exchanges, strictly regulated by consecrated conventions, are enacted in dread of the judgment of
others, under the gaze of a collective opinion quick to condemn in the name
of norms indisputable and undisputed, and are always dominated by the
concern to present the best possible image of oneself, the one best conforming to the ideal of dignity and honor.18
Solemnization, hieraticism and eternalization are inseparable. In the
language of all aesthetics, frontality expresses the eternal, by opposition to
depth, through which temporality is reintroduced. In painting, the plane
expresses being or essence, in a word, the timeless (see Bonnefoy, 1959). If
an action is depicted within it, it is always an essential movement,
immobile and outside of time; it is the words themselves say it well the
equilibrium or poise of an eternal gesture, like the ethical or social norm
that it embodies: spouses standing with their arms around each other
express in another gesture the same meaning as the joined hands in the
portrait bust of Cato and Portia in the Vatican.
Popular photography eliminates the accidental or the aspect, which, as
a fleeting image, dissolves the real by temporalizing it. The snapshot, the
picture taken from life which is the expression of a worldview born in
the Quattrocento with perspective cuts out an instantaneous slice into the
visible world and, petrifying human action, immobilizes a unique state of
the reciprocal relationship between things, and arrests the gaze on an imperceptible moment in a never-completed trajectory. By contrast, the posed
photograph, which only grasps and fixes figures who are settled, motionless, in the immutability of the plane, loses its power of corrosion.19 Thus,
when they spontaneously adopt the arrangements and postures of the
figures of Byzantine mosaics, the peasants of Barn who pose for a wedding
photo seem to want to escape the power that photography has to de-realize
the world by temporalizing it.
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Acknowledgements
This article is the translation of Pierre and Marie-Claire Bourdieu, Le paysan
et la photographie, Revue franaise de sociologie, vol. 6, no. 2, AprilJune
1965, pp. 16474. It is published here in English for the first time by kind
permission of Jrme and Marie-Claire Bourdieu and the journal. The section
titles are by the translators.
Notes
1 This article presents, in a provisional form, documents and data that were
also used in part in a book published simultaneously, Photography: A
Middle-Brow Art (Bourdieu et al., 1965).
2 Lesquire is the pseudonym of the isolated village in this mountainous region
of southwest France near the Spanish border where Pierre Bourdieu spent
his childhood years. It is the site where he carried out fieldwork on gender
and kinship relations among the peasantry in 195961 and subsequent
years, in parallel to similar work among the Kabyles of Algeria [translator].
3 J.-P.A., 85, a widower with a primary school education, lived in the bourg
at the time of the study, but he had spent all of his youth in a hameau.
Interviews with him alternated between French and Barnais.
4 The photograph marks the transition from religious ritual to secular ritual,
the wedding party; it is taken on the doorstep of the church.
5 As at wedding parties, here too the photograph takes its place in the circuit
of ritually imposed exchanges. It is added to the memory image that the
child brings to relatives and neighbors in exchange for a gift.
6 The sending of photographs that follows a wedding generally triggers a
resurgence of correspondence: The exiles ask that the couples featured
on the photo be identified, especially the youth of whom theyve only
known the parents (A.B.).
7 No, the photographer never takes pictures of the ball. That has got no
value in peoples eyes. Ive never seen any (J.L.).
8 Similarly, among the photographs displayed in the villagers homes, one
often sees the annual photo of the rugby team, lined up in a formal pose,
and only very rarely shots of them in action, which are relegated to the
photo box.
9 Most of the more recent photos in B.M.s collection were taken by
amateurs. Some of the pictures of B.M.s wife and daughter were shot
during visits to his wifes brothers wife (who lives in Oloron, a small town
about 80 kilometers away), on the occasion of the market or the fair: the
children are lined up at the front and the adults stand behind them. As for
the other amateur photos, like the one just described they were taken
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10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
during the visit by the brother-in-law from Paris. Four of them stand apart,
at first sight: those that show B.M., in front of his oxen, his goad on his
shoulder, and his nephew in the same posture. Are they actual snapshots
of everyday life? In reality, they are posed and allegorical: on the one hand,
the little Parisian, playing at being a peasant; on the other, not B.M. as a
singular person but the postcard-picture of Barn featuring a peasant
leading his oxen, his body upright, his beret aslant over his ear, his agulhade
on his shoulder.
The major common room, the kitchen, receives only an impersonal decoration, everywhere the same: the charity calendar from the postman or the
fire brigade and colour prints bought in Pau (the closest city, a dozen miles
away) or souvenirs of a pilgrimage visit to Lourdes.
He wants to take photos! Hes becoming a real mister (sen-monsieure),
isnt he! Soon hell be taking pictures of the pigs and the pigsty. Hed do
better to change his plough and that wretched pair of cows hes got to
plough with! A gadget like that, and with that lousy suit!
This explains the ambiguous attitude of the peasant towards the civil
servant employed in the bourg. On the one hand, as the representative of
the central administration and trustee of governmental authority, he is
imbued with respect and consideration. But, on the other hand, the man of
the bourg is truly the bourgeois, the man who has deserted the land and
broken or disowned the bonds that tied him to his original milieu.
Most of the peasants who were questioned on this mentioned relatives who
have taken up photography since they left the village. But a peasant who
sees the sister or cousin, son or brother, who left to work in a factory,
coming back with a camera, is justified to associate photography with the
shift to urban ways. That being so, far from enticing him to imitation, such
examples, even when they concern close relatives, only confirm his conviction that photography is not for us.
If you attended somebodys wedding and you didnt go for the photo,
people noticed that. You werent in the group, they said that M. wasnt in
the photo. They reckoned you slipped away, and it was taken badly (J.L.,
to her husband, in the course of an interview).
Among the Kabyles, the man of honor is a man who faces up, who holds
his head high and looks others in the face, with his own face uncovered
(Bourdieu, 1965).
Photography is the situation in which the awareness of ones body-forothers reaches its highest acuity. One feels subjected to a gaze and to a gaze
that fixes and immobilizes appearances. [Trans.: On the social bases of
bodily embarrassment among the peasants and its structural consequences,
see Bourdieu, 1962, excerpted in this issue as The Peasant and his Body.]
It is not uncommon for a younger son who marries an eldest daughter
and comes to live with her parents to lose his surname and thus to be
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designated only by the name of his new house. [Trans.: Kinship relations
and the reproduction of lineage hierarchy in Barn are discussed at length
in Bourdieu (1990[1980]: 14761).]
18 Wilhelm Hausenstein (1913: 75960) brings to light the connection
between the frontal view and the social structure of feudal and hieratic
societies.
19 Once again, an exception is made for the children, perhaps because change
is their very nature: where the aim is to capture the ephemeral and the accidental, photography is suitable since it cannot snatch the fleeting aspect
from irrecoverable disappearance without constituting it as such.
References
Bonnefoy, Yves (1959) Le temps et lintemporel dans la peinture du Quattrocento, in LImprobable et autres essais. Paris: Mercure de France. (Trans.
Time and the Timeless in Quattrocento Painting, in N. Bryson (ed.)
Calligram: Essays in New Art History from France, pp. 826. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1988.)
Bourdieu, Pierre (1962) Clibat et condition paysanne, tudes rurales 56
(April): 32136 (excerpted in this issue as The Peasant and his Body).
Bourdieu, Pierre (1965) The Sentiment of Honour in Kabyle Society, in J.G.
Peristiany (ed.) Honour and Shame: The Values of Mediterranean Society,
pp. 191241. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
Bourdieu, Pierre et al. (1965) Un Art moyen. Essais sur les usages sociaux de
la photographie. Paris: ditions de Minuit. (Trans. Photography: A MiddleBrow Art. Cambridge: Polity Press; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
1989.)
Bourdieu, Pierre (1990[1980]) The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press;
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Bourdieu, Pierre (2002) Le Bal des clibataires. La crise de la socit paysanne
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Polity Press; Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.)
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and with an intro. by Karen E. Fields). New York: Free Press.
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