This volume examines the transformation of subjectivities following contemporary societal trends with regulatory and administrative authorities targeting human subjectivity with the aim to transform it. It addresses the malleability of human subjectivity through rich qualitative analyses of how different governing attempts are received by the subjects themselves. While the scholarship on governmentality has so far produced an enormously useful body of literature on the ‘how’ aspect of governing, this book suggests that it has been prone to overestimate the degree to which our subjectivities are open to change. Combining ethnographic sensitivity with more traditional governmentality perspectives allows us to explore how governing attempts ‘l...
Subjectification displays the specific processes forming individual existence in the multiple interr...
Humans are subjects in the modern sense of the term to the extent that they can be considered as con...
Introduction: Joan Eveline and Carol Bacchi This chapter examines the primary organising processes w...
This volume examines the transformation of subjectivities following contemporary societal trends wit...
The aim of this book is to examine new forms of resistance to social injustices in contemporary West...
The literature on governmentality has had a major impact across the social sciences over the past de...
Drawn from ethnographic research using post-structural analytics, this book describes how a collecti...
© 2018 International Strategic Management Association. All Rights Reserved. The authors show that th...
This paper problematises some of the assumptions underlying efforts in Governmentality Studies (GS) ...
Accepted version of an article in the journal: Subjectivities. The definitive publisher-authenticate...
This paper explores the emotional life of governmental power through the affective domains of confid...
This paper is based upon ethnographic fieldwork in a Norwegian psychiatric unit practicing a psycho-...
This article addresses the recent changes in social experience and the effect these changes have on ...
© 2010, Routledge. All rights reserved. The problem of subjectivity – of how to conceptualise the su...
Accepted version of an article in the journal: Subjectivities. The definitive publisher-authenticate...
Subjectification displays the specific processes forming individual existence in the multiple interr...
Humans are subjects in the modern sense of the term to the extent that they can be considered as con...
Introduction: Joan Eveline and Carol Bacchi This chapter examines the primary organising processes w...
This volume examines the transformation of subjectivities following contemporary societal trends wit...
The aim of this book is to examine new forms of resistance to social injustices in contemporary West...
The literature on governmentality has had a major impact across the social sciences over the past de...
Drawn from ethnographic research using post-structural analytics, this book describes how a collecti...
© 2018 International Strategic Management Association. All Rights Reserved. The authors show that th...
This paper problematises some of the assumptions underlying efforts in Governmentality Studies (GS) ...
Accepted version of an article in the journal: Subjectivities. The definitive publisher-authenticate...
This paper explores the emotional life of governmental power through the affective domains of confid...
This paper is based upon ethnographic fieldwork in a Norwegian psychiatric unit practicing a psycho-...
This article addresses the recent changes in social experience and the effect these changes have on ...
© 2010, Routledge. All rights reserved. The problem of subjectivity – of how to conceptualise the su...
Accepted version of an article in the journal: Subjectivities. The definitive publisher-authenticate...
Subjectification displays the specific processes forming individual existence in the multiple interr...
Humans are subjects in the modern sense of the term to the extent that they can be considered as con...
Introduction: Joan Eveline and Carol Bacchi This chapter examines the primary organising processes w...