State Habitus
The embodied, preconscious dispositions, practices, and orientations shaped by living within a particular state's administrative, legal, and bureaucratic structures. State Habitus is the internalized sense of how to navigate the state—the instinct to carry papers, to stand in lines, to file forms, to expect certain services, to fear certain uniforms. It varies dramatically across states: the German habitus trusts the bureaucracy to function; the Nigerian habitus expects to negotiate with it; the American habitus resents its existence. State Habitus operates below consciousness, shaping not just how citizens interact with their government but how they feel about that interaction—as natural as breathing or as suffocating as constraint. It's what makes moving between states disorienting: your internalized sense of "how the state works" misfires constantly.
Example: "He moved from Sweden to Mexico and couldn't understand why everyone carried photocopies of their passports everywhere. His Swedish State Habitus assumed the state was a service; in Mexico, he learned the State Habitus of treating it as a potential threat."
State Habitus by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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