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On the Constitution of Self and MindThe Dialectic of the System and the PersonClark University, rfalmagne{at}clarku.edu This article introduces a perspective in which questions at a psychological grain of analysis are integrated with a broad societal frame of interpretation, drawing on interdisciplinary feminist writings that provide alternative ways to theorize the social. It is argued that understanding the constitution of subjectivity, self and thought requires a societal-level model of the social with both discursive and material constituents as well as local discursive processes that are deployed within, and configured through, that broader system. It is further argued that the ontological notion of a person (in a specific, non-modern sense of person and in a specific sense of ontological) is a conceptually necessary part of the theoretical language, as the anchor for processes of social constitution and as the substrate of agency, where agency is theorized as a multilevel process. One central claim developed in this article is that it is through the dialectic among these societal-level, local, and personal constituents that subjectivity, self and thought are constituted, a self that is assumed to be situated, hybrid, complex, tension-filled and unstable, yet substantial.
Key Words: agency discourse feminism mind poststructuralism self sociocultural subjectivity thinking
Theory & Psychology, Vol. 14, No. 6,
822-845 (2004) This article has been cited by other articles:
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