Abstract

The trifold distinction of capital as economic, cultural, and social was popularized by Pierre Bourdieu. While these concepts have enjoyed widespread utilization by sociological scholars, there is often intra-conceptual confusion such that scholars employ widely varying operationalizations rooted in disparate theoretical traditions. This variety invites a discerning eye and is evidence of the fecundity of this trifold distinction of capital as economic, cultural, and social.

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