Article published In: Dialogue and Ways of Relating
Edited by Huey-Rong Chen
[Language and Dialogue 10:1] 2020
► pp. 29–48
On streams and lakes
Metaventriloquism and the technologies of a water controversy
Published online: 19 May 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00058.cas
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00058.cas
Abstract
This article advances the notion of metaventriloquism by bringing together the concepts of metacommunication and
ventriloquism (. 2010. Action and Agency in Dialogue: Passion, Incarnation and Ventriloquism. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ). Metaventriloquism is when one makes claims regarding who or what
another is speaking behalf of. To explore the implications of metaventriloquism, a public hearing related to a community water controversy
is analyzed. The analysis illustrates how metaventriloquism may be used as a form of critique and operates retrospectively in claiming what
motivated another, and prospectively in claiming what another should do. The implications of metaventriloquism for the construction of
technological risks are also explored.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Theoretical background
- 2.1The ventriloquial approach
- 2.2Metacommunication
- 2.3Bring metacommunication and ventriloquism together: Metaventriloquism
- 2.4Technology, risk, and ventriloquism
- 3.Data
- 3.1Contextual background
- 3.2Method of data analysis
- 4.Analysis
- 4.1Diversion request as ventriloquial process
- 4.2Metaventriloquism and legitimation: Water for the public good
- 4.3Metaventriloquism and presentification: Constructing a responsible partner
- 4.4Metaventriloquism as critique
- 4.5Metaventriloquism and technological cautions
- 5.Discussion and conclusion
- Notes
References
References (37)
Barad, Karen. 2007. Meeting the Universe Halfway: Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Duke University Press.
Bateson, Gregory. 1972. Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
Bencherki, Nicolas and François Cooren. 2011. “Having To Be: The Possessive Constitution of Organization.” Human Relations 641: 1579–1607.
Bencherki, Nicolas, Frederic Matte, and François Cooren (eds). 2019. Authority and Power in Social Interaction Methods and Analysis. New York: Routledge.
Benoit-Barné, Chantal and François Cooren. 2009. “The Accomplishment of Authority Through Presentification How Authority Is Distributed Among and Negotiated by Organizational Members.” Management Communication Quarterly 23 (1): 5–31.
Carbaugh, Donal. 1989. “Fifty terms for talk: A cross-cultural study.” International and intercultural communication annual 13 (93): 120.
Caronia, Letizia and François Cooren. 2014. “Decentering Our Analytical Position: The Dialogicity of Things.” Discourse and Communication 8 (1): 41–61.
Castor, Theresa R. 2016. “The materiality of discourse: relational positioning in a fresh water controversy.” Communication Research and Practice 2 (3): 334–350.
Castor, Theresa. 2018. “Sustainability and Textual Extensions of Institutional Discourse: Testing the Great Lakes Compact.” Critical Sociology 44 (2): 341–356.
Cooren, François. 2004. “Textual Agency: How Texts Do Things in Organizational Settings.” Organization 11 (3): 373–393.
. 2006. “The Organizational World as a Plenum of Agencies.” In Communication as Organizing: Empirical and Theoretical Explorations in the Dynamic of Text and Conversation, ed. by François Cooren, James R. Taylor, and Elizabeth J. Van Every, 81–100. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
. 2010. Action and Agency in Dialogue: Passion, Incarnation and Ventriloquism. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
. 2015. “In Medias Res: Communication, Existence, and Materiality.” Communication Research and Practice 1(4): 1–15.
Cooren, François and Nicholas Bencherki. 2010. “How things do things with words: Ventriloquism, passion and technology.” Encyclopaideia 151: 35–61.
Cooren, François, Frédérik Matte, Chantal Benoit-Barné, and Boris Brummans. 2013. “Communication as Ventriloquism: A Grounded-in-Action Approach to the Study of Organizational Tensions.” Communication Monographs 801: 255–277.
Cooren, François and Sergeiy Sandler. 2014. “Polyphony, Ventriloquism, and Constitution: In Dialogue with Bakhtin.” Communication Theory 241: 225–224.
Cooren, François, Fiona Thompson, Donna Canestraro, and Tamas Bodor. 2006. “From Agency to Structure: Analysis of an Episode in a Facilitation Process.” Human Relations 591: 533–565.
Craig, Robert. 2005. How we talk about how we talk: Communication theory in the public interest. Journal of Communication 551: 659–667.
Craig, Robert T. and Karen Tracy. 2014. “Building Grounded Practical Theory in Applied Communication Research: Introduction to the Special Issue.” Journal of Applied Communication Research 42 (3): 229–243.
Latour, Bruno. 2008. What Is the Style of Matters of Concern. Two Lectures in Empirical Philosophy. Amsterdam: Van Gorcum.
Lucy, John A. (ed.). 1993. Reflexive Language: Reported Speech and Metapragmatics. Cambridge University Press.
Luhmann, Niklas. 1990. “Technology, Environment and Social Risk: A Systems Perspective.” Industrial Crisis Quarterly 4(3): 223–31.
Martine, Thomas, François Cooren, Aurélien Bénel, and Manuel Zacklad. 2016. “What Does Really Matter in Technology Adoption and Use? A CCO Approach.” Management Communication Quarterly 30(2): 164–187.
Murphy, Raymond. 2004. “Disaster or Sustainability: The Dance of Human Agents with Nature’s Actants.” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 41(3): 249–266.
Robles, Jessica S. and Elizabeth S. Parks. 2019. “Complaints about technology as a resource for identity-work.” Language in Society 48(2): 209–231.
Strifling, David. 2018, March 20. Will the Foxconn project “transform” Wisconsin’s water resources? [Blog post]. Retrieved from [URL]
Tatge-Rozell, Jill. “Hundreds comment on proposed plan to tap Lake Michigan.” Kenosha News, March 7, 2018. Accessed May 31, 2019. [URL]
Taylor, James R. and Elizabeth J. Van Every. 2014. When organization fails: Why authority matters. Routledge.
Vasilyeva, Alena, Jessica Robles, Jean Saludadez, Christian Schwägerl, and Theresa Castor. 2019. “The varieties of (more or less) formal authority.” In Authority and Power in Social Interaction Methods and Analysis, ed. by Nicolas Bencherki, Frederic Matte, and François Cooren, 37–55. New York: Routledge.
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Cooren, François & Jacinthe Dupuis
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 25 november 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
