Emotional Athletes, Brainy Workers and other Hot New Developments: Multiple (re)problematizations of Heat Stress as an object of governance in northern Australia

IF 1.5 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
E. Oppermann, Michael Spencer, M. Brearley
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

This paper presents an effort to think about ‘heat stress’ as multiple objects of governance. In seeking to analyse this ‘object’ we draw on Foucault’s account of ‘problematization’ (1985, 2009). Accordingly, heat stress is not understood as a mere description of an aspect of reality, but instead emerges as an object of knowledge from particular practices in particular times and places which draw together certain elements (Laclau & Mouffe, 2001; Oppermann, 2013) such as concepts, measures and rules: Problematization doesn’t mean the representation of a pre-existent object, nor the creation through discourse of an object that doesn’t exist. It denotes the set of discursive or non-discursive practices that makes something enter the play of the true and false and constitutes it as an object for thought. (Foucault, as cited in Flynn, 2005, pp.26-7). Problematized in a particular way, the object becomes ‘governable’. In analysing problematizations as producing a particular objects of governance, we consider four analytical questions: what is made visible, how is it known, how is it intervened in, and what subject(ivities) are produced (Dean, 2010)? That is, why are certain elements considered to be significant and problematic, how are these things understood and communicated, and what techniques and practices seek to manage these things to produce an idealised outcome, population or subjectivity? Because problematizations thus produce the social world as well as ‘represent’ it, problematizations are inherently political. To trace the problematization heat stress as an object of knowledge and governance, we present extracts from a conversation between the authors, which explored the investigations and interventions of Dr Matt Brearley, an exercise scientist addressing heat stress. Re-telling some of Matt’s experiences in trying to ‘understand’ heat stress brings into focus the contingency through which problematizations emerge. These stories also highlight how objects of governance are not necessarily singular, but can change over time and can be multiple (Mol, 2002). We notice in our conversation the ruptures of a singular heat stress that prompt its emergence as multiple objects, and the work that Matt finds himself doing to (re) problematize heat stress as a local object of knowledge and governance in different places and times. Having journeyed through these multiple objects produced by different problematizations of ‘heat stress’, we then raise questions about how these objects of governance may come to relate as they participate in an emerging northern Australian governmentality centred on labour-intensive development.
情感运动员,聪明的工人和其他热门的新发展:热应激作为澳大利亚北部治理对象的多重(再)问题
本文提出了将“热压力”视为治理的多个对象的努力。在试图分析这个“对象”时,我们借鉴了福柯对“问题化”的描述(1985,2009)。因此,热应激不被理解为仅仅是对现实的一个方面的描述,而是作为特定时间和地点的特定实践的知识对象出现的,这些实践汇集了某些元素(Laclau & Mouffe, 2001;Oppermann, 2013),如概念,措施和规则:问题化并不意味着对一个预先存在的对象的再现,也不是通过话语创造一个不存在的对象。它指的是一组话语或非话语的实践,这些实践使事物进入真与假的游戏,并将其构成思想的对象。(福柯,引自弗林,2005年,第26-7页)。以一种特定的方式问题化,对象变得“可控”。在分析作为产生特定治理对象的问题化时,我们考虑了四个分析问题:什么是可见的,它是如何被知道的,它是如何被干预的,以及产生了什么主体(活动)(Dean, 2010)?也就是说,为什么某些元素被认为是重要的和有问题的,这些东西是如何理解和沟通的,以及什么样的技术和实践试图管理这些东西,以产生理想的结果,人口或主观性?因为问题化因此产生了社会世界,也“代表”了它,问题化本质上是政治性的。为了追踪热应激作为知识和治理对象的问题化,我们提供了作者之间对话的摘录,其中探讨了运动科学家Matt Brearley博士对热应激的调查和干预。重新讲述马特试图“理解”热应激的一些经历,使人们关注到问题化出现的偶然性。这些故事还强调了治理的对象不一定是单一的,而是可以随着时间的推移而变化,可以是多重的(Mol, 2002)。在我们的谈话中,我们注意到一个单一的热应力的破裂促使它作为多个对象出现,而马特发现自己正在做的工作是(重新)将热应力作为不同地点和时间的知识和治理的局部对象来解决问题。在经历了这些由不同的“热应力”问题化产生的多个对象之后,我们提出了这些治理对象如何在参与以劳动密集型发展为中心的新兴澳大利亚北部治理时相互关联的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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9.10%
发文量
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