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Performativity confounded: agency, resistance, and the history of politeness.
- Source :
- Text & Performance Quarterly; Oct2022, Vol. 42 Issue 4, p367-386, 20p
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- This essay compares Judith Butler's and Erving Goffman's theoretical contributions to performance and performativity with the goal of bridging their approaches, usually seen as mutually incompatible. Using eighteenth-century women's politeness as a case study, it argues that politeness is a practice that is essentially both performed and performative; analysing it as such offers us valuable new information on eighteenth-century subjectivities. The essay suggests that combining performance and performativity can be used to reconceptualize agency and find a way out of the Butlerian impasse of the impossibility of resistance. Performance thus has the potential to confound the paralyzing non-agency of performativity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- PERFORMATIVE (Philosophy)
PERFORMANCE
PHILOSOPHERS
COURTESY
ETIQUETTE for women
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 10462937
- Volume :
- 42
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Text & Performance Quarterly
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 159583619
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10462937.2022.2100925