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What is Post-structuralism

Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Second Edition
Post-structuralism is a response to foundationalism, concerned particularly with the work that language performs. Similar to postmodernism, post-structuralism challenges singular narratives and objectivity, but focuses on the processes of subjectification and identity formation through language.
Published in Chapter:
Framing Political, Personal Expression on the Web
Matthew W. Wilson (University of Washington, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-026-4.ch250
Abstract
The World Wide Web, as a collection of Web sites, Web services, and Web-enabled technologies, is a space of expression and contestation—a social construction of sorts. Additionally, the Web, as a locus of investigation, is gaining attention from scholars in the social sciences, feminist and critical theorists, as well as more recent poststructural reconceptualizations across many disciplines. One unifying interest is precisely the topic of this article: How might we recognize what is considered political and personal in a virtual space? To what sense can we distinguish political and personal expression online? This article frames the diverse perspectives for interrogating political and personal expression on the Web, while offering considerations for why these sorts of projects are at all necessary or useful. The determinacy of virtual, Web-based locations as political and/or personal is a complex endeavor. Does a prochoice posting to an anti-abortion online discussion group constitute a political act? What is potentially meant by “political”? Several discussion forums or news groups contain categories like “politics” or “government and politics” (see Yahoo! Groups for example); and yet, such groups may or may not be perceived as “political”. This perception of “being political” is dependent on certain philosophical tensions about what can be considered political in certain spaces and times. Other Web sites seek to build politics through the Web, via such movements as e-democracy, online deliberation, or public participation geographic information systems (Davies & Novack, forthcoming; Dragicevic & Balram, 2006). However, while building politics is certainly political, surficial analysis of such online-coalition building endeavors may resist or gloss the multiple political implications for constructing a politics. Therefore this entry contains a discussion of politics and “the political”; each as a perspective has certain methodological and empirical contingencies. Namely, how do we study online interactions? What sorts of data might we collect? Furthermore, how are we, as researchers, already implicated in our studies of online interactions? This entry proposes a diversity of approaches in studying interactions within the Web as informed by both the information sciences and the humanities and is organized into four sections: first, a background section which contemplates more traditional debate in political theory made relevant to studies of the Web; a second section which proposes (post)modernist and poststructuralist framings for researching personal and political expression; third, a section offering future research questions in this research area; and finally, conclusions that reflect upon research on the Web.
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More Results
The “Subaltern” Will Speak: Investigating Portrayals in the Acclaimed OTT Series of India and Pakistan
Post-structuralism, arising in the 1960s and 1970s, is a philosophical and humanities movement challenging structuralism. It questions established notions about language, texts, and social sciences, promoting diverse interpretations and perspectives.
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Meditations on the Intrinsic Value of Life and the Present and Future Nature of Death and Dying: Worthy v Lost I
A philosophy that critiques fixed structures of power and knowledge, emphasizing the changing nature of truth.
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An Epistemology of the Event for the Digital Media: From Lewis Carroll to Elsagate
Philosophical reaction, the origins of which are usually dated to 1966, to the methodological ambitions of structuralism, and which aims to confront the latter with the contradictions of its idealist inheritance.
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Fourth Space Education: A Cinematic Methodology for Architectural Pedagogy
An intellectual movement that emerged in France during the 1960s and 1970s claiming that any work is not the result of experience or pre-determined cultures, as these can be misinterpreted. Instead, to understand any work, one must study the systems that produced this work.
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Prostitution/Pro-S-Institution and “The Celebrated Marginal” Culture: An Intersectionally Socio-Historical Depiction of Indian Sex-Workers
This concept emerged from structuralism which focused on the fixation of meanings and words. It considered words have fixed meaning and they are inherently connected. While Post-structuralism focused on the flux of words stating the relation between words and its meaning is arbitrary and Derrida, a well know reference in this field considered the constructivism of the structuralist can be deconstructed with post-structuralism.
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