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This is the first critical introduction to the theories of discourse advanced by Foucault, Althusser, PUcheux and Hindess and Hirst. Discourse theory proposes that in our daily activities the way we speak and write is shaped by the structures of power in our society, and that because our society is defined by struggle and conflict our discourses reflect and create conflicts. The words, expressions and forms of knowledge in institutions (schools and universities, the church and the media) become political as they are traversed and rearranged by the pressure of forces. Diane Macdonell reveals the various lines of thought in recent work on discourse, showing how the central conception of discourse as a political and social tool could diversify into several different critical theories and ideologies. This book is of particular interest as it calls for a reappraisal of Althusser whose work, Macdonell argues, has been wrongly debunked. This is the first overview and introduction to a notoriously complex area of critical theory, an area which is at the heart of debates about form, meaning, ideology, literary criticism and the humanities.
Diane Macdonell is the author of Theories of Discourse: An Introduction, published by Wiley.
Acknowledgements vii Introduction 1What is 'discourse'? 1Discourse and literary studies 41 The end of the 1960s 8Structuralism's demise 8May 1968 and questions of practice 122 From ideology to discourse: the Althusserian stand 24The prevailing practices 28Ideologies in struggle 33Against humanism: problems of the subject 363 Meaningful antagonisms: Pecheux on discourse 43Discourse and position 45Scientific discourse 564 Discourse and the critique of epistemology 60Hindess and Hirst 64Everything is discourse? 68The politics of philosophy 755 Foucault's archaeologies of knowledge 82Dismantling the history of ideas 84Conditions of knowledge 89Problems and advances 946 Subjection, discourse, power 101Subjection and the body 102Discourse and subjection 110Of power and resistance, or, What's wrong with pragmatism? 118Conclusion 125Notes 131Bibliography 133Index 140