Added by Geoff Sauer on Jan 13, 2003.
Average rating: 3.50/5.00 (n=2, std dev: 0.71)
 


In Language and Symbolic Power, Pierre Bourdieu demonstrates how the language practices of institutions can generate symbolic violence and relations of power. At the same time, these language practices make existing power relationships seem natural and thus hide the symbolic violence from both more and less powerful inhabitants of these sites. Research has only recently begun to examine critically these practices as they function in corporate America. This talk will examine textual practices within a large manufacturer of agricultural equipment to show how they require subordinates to document their work in forms determined by management. Such documentation represents work in terms acceptable to managers and prevents subordinates from developing alternative understandings of the possibilities of their labor.
 
  View all four works by Winsor, Dorothy A.  
  View all 9 works published by University of Illinois  

Please share your rating/opinion of "Using Writing to Negotiate Knowledge and Power".
 PoorExcellent 
The link to this work seems to be broken.

Copyright © 2001-09 by the EServer. All rights reserved.Add a Work | Update this Work | Discussion Forum | Habitués