What D/discourse analysis can tell us about neoliberal constructions of (gendered) personhood

Some notes on commonsense and temporality

Authors

  • Catherine Kingfisher University of Lethbridge

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.2007.1.1.93

Keywords:

Discourse, Commonsense, Cultural Formation, Temporality, Neoliberalism

Abstract

How do the commonsense claims of Discourse (systems of knowledge production) relate to those of discourses (informal conversations, texts)? Under what conditions does a Discourse become commonsense and how, when, and under what conditions does it lose this status? How can we track changes in gendered D/discourses over time? This paper explores these questions with reference to the neoliberal, gendered constructions of personhood accompanying welfare reforms in Aotearoa/New Zealand in 1991 and 1996, and the changes that have occurred since Aotearoa/New Zealand began, in 1999, to retreat from neoliberalism. An understanding of the place of neoliberal conceptualizations of personhood in the discourse of poor single mothers and welfare providers, and in policy texts five years after the government shift, calls for a D/discourse analysis that is oriented simultaneously to the problematics of commonsense and temporality.

Author Biography

  • Catherine Kingfisher, University of Lethbridge

    Department of Anthropology University of Lethbridge 4401 University Drive Lethbridge, Alberta Canada T1K 3M4

Published

2007-01-20

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Kingfisher, C. (2007). What D/discourse analysis can tell us about neoliberal constructions of (gendered) personhood: Some notes on commonsense and temporality. Gender and Language, 1(1), 93-105. https://doi.org/10.1558/genl.2007.1.1.93