{"title":"“反向话语”再访:裂缝、形成与对权力的复杂理解","authors":"Mikael Baaz, Mona Lilja","doi":"10.1080/13600826.2022.2052026","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Notable scholars within International Relations (IR) have nuanced the concept of resistance, as well as, more generally, paving the way for acknowledging how Foucauldian approaches support thinking about resistance within IR (see e.g. Death 2016; Odysseos, Death, and Malmvig 2016; Lilja and Vinthagen 2014; Malmvig 2016). Based on this theme, this special issue aims to further carve out forms and nuances of resistance. Not surprisingly, there are several papers in Global Society that address creative responses to power, as well as power’s responses back. Not least, a recent special edition of the journal has made the study of resistance more complex by embracing “counter-conducts”; that is, a concept that was recently recovered fromMichel Foucault’s Security, Territory, Population (2009) lectures. We find the constructive use of the concept of counter-conducts interesting and original. However, in our thinking, the valorisation of the concept, in some senses, leads to an omission of Foucault’s multiple forms of resistance. Resistance, in Foucault’s texts, is sometimes described as resistance against authorities (sometimes the state and other governing units, and sometimes local authorities; Foucault 2009, 201; Foucault 1982, 329–331; Foucault 1991, 149). In other texts, however, he describes resistance as a discursive phenomenon. Discursive resistance, which appears as repetitions of signs across time, more generally, does not signal major ruptures, breaks or discontinuities. Indeed, this resistance, which occasionally aims to establish alternative truths, could be seen as a slow-motion form of resistance as it suffers from the inescapable time-lag of processes of signification (Lilja 2021, 2018). It is the strategic codification of different points of resistance that, in the end, becomes the hotbed for radical social change (Foucault 1990, 96; Bhabha 1994). Sometimes, these more linguistic forms of resistance take the form of reverse discourse. According to Foucault (1990, 101–102):","PeriodicalId":46197,"journal":{"name":"Global Society","volume":"36 1","pages":"301 - 308"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2022-06-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"“Reverse Discourse” Revisited: Cracks, Formations, and a Complex Understanding of Power\",\"authors\":\"Mikael Baaz, Mona Lilja\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/13600826.2022.2052026\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Notable scholars within International Relations (IR) have nuanced the concept of resistance, as well as, more generally, paving the way for acknowledging how Foucauldian approaches support thinking about resistance within IR (see e.g. Death 2016; Odysseos, Death, and Malmvig 2016; Lilja and Vinthagen 2014; Malmvig 2016). Based on this theme, this special issue aims to further carve out forms and nuances of resistance. Not surprisingly, there are several papers in Global Society that address creative responses to power, as well as power’s responses back. Not least, a recent special edition of the journal has made the study of resistance more complex by embracing “counter-conducts”; that is, a concept that was recently recovered fromMichel Foucault’s Security, Territory, Population (2009) lectures. We find the constructive use of the concept of counter-conducts interesting and original. However, in our thinking, the valorisation of the concept, in some senses, leads to an omission of Foucault’s multiple forms of resistance. Resistance, in Foucault’s texts, is sometimes described as resistance against authorities (sometimes the state and other governing units, and sometimes local authorities; Foucault 2009, 201; Foucault 1982, 329–331; Foucault 1991, 149). In other texts, however, he describes resistance as a discursive phenomenon. Discursive resistance, which appears as repetitions of signs across time, more generally, does not signal major ruptures, breaks or discontinuities. Indeed, this resistance, which occasionally aims to establish alternative truths, could be seen as a slow-motion form of resistance as it suffers from the inescapable time-lag of processes of signification (Lilja 2021, 2018). It is the strategic codification of different points of resistance that, in the end, becomes the hotbed for radical social change (Foucault 1990, 96; Bhabha 1994). Sometimes, these more linguistic forms of resistance take the form of reverse discourse. 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“Reverse Discourse” Revisited: Cracks, Formations, and a Complex Understanding of Power
Notable scholars within International Relations (IR) have nuanced the concept of resistance, as well as, more generally, paving the way for acknowledging how Foucauldian approaches support thinking about resistance within IR (see e.g. Death 2016; Odysseos, Death, and Malmvig 2016; Lilja and Vinthagen 2014; Malmvig 2016). Based on this theme, this special issue aims to further carve out forms and nuances of resistance. Not surprisingly, there are several papers in Global Society that address creative responses to power, as well as power’s responses back. Not least, a recent special edition of the journal has made the study of resistance more complex by embracing “counter-conducts”; that is, a concept that was recently recovered fromMichel Foucault’s Security, Territory, Population (2009) lectures. We find the constructive use of the concept of counter-conducts interesting and original. However, in our thinking, the valorisation of the concept, in some senses, leads to an omission of Foucault’s multiple forms of resistance. Resistance, in Foucault’s texts, is sometimes described as resistance against authorities (sometimes the state and other governing units, and sometimes local authorities; Foucault 2009, 201; Foucault 1982, 329–331; Foucault 1991, 149). In other texts, however, he describes resistance as a discursive phenomenon. Discursive resistance, which appears as repetitions of signs across time, more generally, does not signal major ruptures, breaks or discontinuities. Indeed, this resistance, which occasionally aims to establish alternative truths, could be seen as a slow-motion form of resistance as it suffers from the inescapable time-lag of processes of signification (Lilja 2021, 2018). It is the strategic codification of different points of resistance that, in the end, becomes the hotbed for radical social change (Foucault 1990, 96; Bhabha 1994). Sometimes, these more linguistic forms of resistance take the form of reverse discourse. According to Foucault (1990, 101–102):
期刊介绍:
Global Society covers the new agenda in global and international relations and encourages innovative approaches to the study of global and international issues from a range of disciplines. It promotes the analysis of transactions at multiple levels, and in particular, the way in which these transactions blur the distinction between the sub-national, national, transnational, international and global levels. An ever integrating global society raises a number of issues for global and international relations which do not fit comfortably within established "Paradigms" Among these are the international and global consequences of nationalism and struggles for identity, migration, racism, religious fundamentalism, terrorism and criminal activities.