In:Studies of Discourse and Governmentality: New perspectives and methods
Edited by Paul McIlvenny, Julia Zhukova Klausen and Laura Bang Lindegaard
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 66] 2016
► pp. 95–118
The discursive intersection of the government of others and the government of self in the face of climate change
Published online: 29 June 2016
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.66.03ban
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.66.03ban
The chapter demonstrates how empirical discourse analysis can contribute to
the study of two issues of particular significance in recent studies of governmentality.
Firstly, the observation that the relationship between power and
resistance is specifically contradictory, in that resistance marks both a boundary
and a constitutive moment of government, and, secondly, the realisation
that governmentality is somehow intertwined with the continuous becoming
of ethical subjects, or, in other words, with continuously negotiated practices of
subjectivation. The chapter pursues and enforces the theoretical argument that
practices of subjectivation should be understood as an aspect of the unceasingly
negotiated interdependence of power and resistance. This suggests that this
theoretical insight can be fulfilled in empirical research if studies of governmentality
are interconnected with membership categorisation analysis and conversation
analysis. To demonstrate the benefits of this approach, the chapter provides
an in-depth analysis of focus group data from sessions in a small Danish village
in which citizens accomplish the contested discursive intersection of, on the one
hand, a municipal strategy aimed at ‘greening’ the citizens’ transportation conduct
and, on the other hand, the citizens’ attempt to conduct their own conduct.
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Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Gu, Michelle Mingyu, Lianjiang Jiang & Wanyu Amy Ou
Mills‐Novoa, Megan & Michael Mikulewicz
Steinkopf, Julie
Winther, Bjarke Zinck & Laura Bang Lindegaard
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