Discourse Communities and the Discourse of Experience
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine
- Vol. 7 (1) , 73-86
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1363459303007001619
Abstract
Discourse communities are groups of people who share common ideologies, and common ways of speaking about things. They can be sharply or loosely defined. We are each members of multiple discourse communities. Discourse can colonize the members of discourse communities, taking over domains of thought by means of ideology. The development of new discourse communities can serve positive ends, but discourse communities create risks as well. In our own work on the narratives of people with interests in health care, for example, we find that patients speak of their illness experiences as victims of circumstance; policy makers construct adverse experiences and challenges as opportunities to be taken; health care workers speak from a mixed perspective, seeing themselves as both victims and opportunists depending on context. To be trapped within the discourse of a particular community is to put at risk the ability to communicate across discourses. Membership of a discourse community can impair the habit of critique, and deny opportunities for heteroglossic discourse. Privileging critique as a mode of discourse perhaps might define the ethical community, suggesting that ethical community may be an antidote to the constraining effects of conventional discourse community.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discourse in different voices: reconciling N=1 and N=manySocial Science & Medicine, 2002
- Survivorship and discourses of identityPsycho‐Oncology, 2002
- Life disruption and generic complexity: a social linguistic analysis of narratives of cancer illnessSocial Science & Medicine, 2001
- Biotechnology, Political Rationality and Discourses on Health RiskHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 2001
- IntroductionHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 2001
- Approval and Disapproval in the Narratives of Colorectal Cancer Patients and Their CarersHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 1999
- Liminality: a major category of the experience of cancer illnessPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Healing Dramas and Clinical PlotsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1998
- The Wounded StorytellerPublished by University of Chicago Press ,1995
- The Evidence of ExperienceCritical Inquiry, 1991