The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015

In the late 1980s, references to postmodernism, post-structuralism, and Michel Foucault started to appear in nursing journals. Since that time, hundreds of journal articles and dozens of books in the discipline of nursing have cited these continental-philosophical ideas—in substantial or minor ways—...

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Main Author: Petrovskaya, Olga
Other Authors: Purkis, Mary Ellen
Language:English
en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7622
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-76222016-11-13T17:01:40Z The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015 Petrovskaya, Olga Purkis, Mary Ellen nursing post-structural theory postmodern theory Michel Foucault American nursing theory qualitative research continental philosophy In the late 1980s, references to postmodernism, post-structuralism, and Michel Foucault started to appear in nursing journals. Since that time, hundreds of journal articles and dozens of books in the discipline of nursing have cited these continental-philosophical ideas—in substantial or minor ways—in nurses’ analyses of topics in nursing practice, education, and research. Key postmodern and post-structural notions including power/knowledge, discourse, the clinical gaze, disciplinary power, de-centering of the human subject as the originator of “meaning,” and the challenge to grand narratives and binary thinking—all found their place on the pages of journals such as the Journal of Advanced Nursing, Nursing Inquiry, and Nursing Philosophy and in a predominantly American journal Advances in Nursing Science among a few other periodicals. In my dissertation, I assemble this voluminous body of publications into a “field of study.” Taking a comparative approach to this field, I argue that we can understand postmodern/post-structural scholarship in nursing as characterized by a marked difference between its non-American (in this case, Australian and New Zealand, British and Irish, and Canadian) and American domains. While each domain is heterogeneous, peculiar features distinguish American postmodern/post-structural nursing literature from its non-American counterparts. I build on a recent systematic critique of so-called American “unique nursing science” and (meta)theory by Mark Risjord (2010), who surfaced the unacknowledged legacy of the logical positivist philosophy of science on contemporary American nursing conceptions of science and theory. These influences, according to Risjord, have had profound and lasting intellectual impact on nursing theoretical work manifesting in the notions of “unique science,” a caution toward “borrowed theory,” a hierarchical model of theory, the language of metaparadigms, incommensurable paradigms, and so on. These ideas and related practices of theorizing have culminated in what I call the American disciplinary nursing matrices that shape the visibility and intelligibility of alternative practices of theorizing in the discipline of nursing. I show the ways in which these matrices are consequential for how postmodern and post-structural philosophical ideas are understood, discussed, and deployed (or not) in American nursing literature; indeed, I argue that these continental ideas, vital for nurses’ ability to critically reflect on the discipline and the profession—are unintelligible as a form of nursing knowledge within the American nursing theoretical matrices. Graduate 2017-09-29 0569 0344 2016-11-09T23:15:35Z 2016 2016-11-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7622 Petrovskaya, O. (2014). Is there nursing phenomenology after Paley? Essay on rigorous reading. Nursing Philosophy, 15 (1), 60–71. Petrovskaya, O. (2014). Domesticating Paley: How we misread Paley (and phenomenology). Nursing Philosophy, 15 (1), 72–75. English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic nursing
post-structural theory
postmodern theory
Michel Foucault
American nursing theory
qualitative research
continental philosophy
spellingShingle nursing
post-structural theory
postmodern theory
Michel Foucault
American nursing theory
qualitative research
continental philosophy
Petrovskaya, Olga
The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
description In the late 1980s, references to postmodernism, post-structuralism, and Michel Foucault started to appear in nursing journals. Since that time, hundreds of journal articles and dozens of books in the discipline of nursing have cited these continental-philosophical ideas—in substantial or minor ways—in nurses’ analyses of topics in nursing practice, education, and research. Key postmodern and post-structural notions including power/knowledge, discourse, the clinical gaze, disciplinary power, de-centering of the human subject as the originator of “meaning,” and the challenge to grand narratives and binary thinking—all found their place on the pages of journals such as the Journal of Advanced Nursing, Nursing Inquiry, and Nursing Philosophy and in a predominantly American journal Advances in Nursing Science among a few other periodicals. In my dissertation, I assemble this voluminous body of publications into a “field of study.” Taking a comparative approach to this field, I argue that we can understand postmodern/post-structural scholarship in nursing as characterized by a marked difference between its non-American (in this case, Australian and New Zealand, British and Irish, and Canadian) and American domains. While each domain is heterogeneous, peculiar features distinguish American postmodern/post-structural nursing literature from its non-American counterparts. I build on a recent systematic critique of so-called American “unique nursing science” and (meta)theory by Mark Risjord (2010), who surfaced the unacknowledged legacy of the logical positivist philosophy of science on contemporary American nursing conceptions of science and theory. These influences, according to Risjord, have had profound and lasting intellectual impact on nursing theoretical work manifesting in the notions of “unique science,” a caution toward “borrowed theory,” a hierarchical model of theory, the language of metaparadigms, incommensurable paradigms, and so on. These ideas and related practices of theorizing have culminated in what I call the American disciplinary nursing matrices that shape the visibility and intelligibility of alternative practices of theorizing in the discipline of nursing. I show the ways in which these matrices are consequential for how postmodern and post-structural philosophical ideas are understood, discussed, and deployed (or not) in American nursing literature; indeed, I argue that these continental ideas, vital for nurses’ ability to critically reflect on the discipline and the profession—are unintelligible as a form of nursing knowledge within the American nursing theoretical matrices. === Graduate === 2017-09-29 === 0569 === 0344
author2 Purkis, Mary Ellen
author_facet Purkis, Mary Ellen
Petrovskaya, Olga
author Petrovskaya, Olga
author_sort Petrovskaya, Olga
title The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
title_short The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
title_full The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
title_fullStr The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
title_full_unstemmed The matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of American and selected non-American literature from the late 1980s to 2015
title_sort matrices of (un)intelligibility: postmodern and post-structural influences in nursing— a descriptive comparison of american and selected non-american literature from the late 1980s to 2015
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7622
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