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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2003

Pages: 63-82

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349429264

Full citation:

Marianne W. Jørgensen, "Reflexivity and the doubles of modern man", in: Critical discourse analysis, Berlin, Springer, 2003

Reflexivity and the doubles of modern man

the discursive construction of anthropological subject positions

Marianne W. Jørgensen

pp. 63-82

in: Gilbert Weiss, Ruth Wodak (eds), Critical discourse analysis, Berlin, Springer, 2003

Abstract

Scientific knowledge is situated, it has been argued in recent decades, and in debates on scientific knowledge, whether natural, social or human scientific, reflexive writers1 have focused their attention on the social and cultural context of knowledge production. The common argument is that knowledge is not just a passive reflection of an object "out there" but also a projection of forces working from "within" the author, the academy or Western culture at large. Knowledge is seen as shaped, or even as exclusively determined, by shared conventions for knowledge production, and "truth" is understood to be more a matter of providing a culturally recognizable representation of reality than a direct correspondence with reality. This constructivist epistemology has prompted a large amount of reflexive research into the conditions of possibility of traditional scientific knowledge and extensive discussions of what scientific knowledge is and should be.

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2003

Pages: 63-82

ISBN (Hardback): 9781349429264

Full citation:

Marianne W. Jørgensen, "Reflexivity and the doubles of modern man", in: Critical discourse analysis, Berlin, Springer, 2003