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Dorothy E. Smith. Writing the Social: Critique,
Theory, and Investigations Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. Pp.
307.
The writing of history is simply not as
rote or mundane as it used to be. Parallel with the fragmentation of
disciplines and prominence of research in Canadian universities, any
historiography in Canada over the past half-century reveals increasingly
multifarious perspectives on what and whom to write about, and what argument to
use. The introspection imbued in the writing, either conscious or subliminal,
has stimulated substantial scholarship into such topics as gender, race,
ethnicity, power, communities, and cultures, to name just a few. The result has
been a flowering of history in both popular and, especially, academic macro
and micro studies, and a realization that anything in the past is open to
critical analysis and discussion.
Does this sound roseate? In Writing
the Social: Critique, Theory, and Investigations, Dorothy Smith argues
against the suggestion that these are the halcyon days of academic writing.
Further, Smith would contend that all is not well in halls of academe, where
certain voices are marginalized and subjectivities denied. Since the
universities in Canada have evolved over the past forty years into large
bureaucratic research institutes, Writing the Social takes on
sociological and, by association, socio-historical research and disciplines, uncovering
obvious and nuanced structures and discourses which are antithetical to
maximizing communication and democracy in academe. In short, Smith raises
flags: all is not well. This book is instructive and important.
It rattles the cage of the complacent academe by deconstructing the order of
patriarchal dominance that permeates the ruling relations of the institute.
Smith asserts that Athe ruling relations...[co-ordinate] the
activities of people in the local sites of their bodily being into relations
operating independently of person, place, and time@(p. 75). Individual experience, especially the local
experience and living of women in the university, take a hit to the effect that
agency is objectified into impotence; the active, thinking, feeling individual
is forced into activity and discourse antithetical to free discussion and,
almost, to free will. In the analogous patriarchal Amain business@ in modern political economy, for example, women=s other work of child-rearing remains
invisible (p. 38). The texts, discursive spaces, and practices of the
university control the agent and mediate relations as surely as the agent
supports the ruling relations simply by participating. AThe development of the ruling relations as an
historical trajectory has progressively transferred organization from person to
objectified forms@ (p. 81). Disciplines and universities
are in need of an overhaul.
Writing the Social tackles a host of issues revolving
around gender inequality that are rife in sociological writing and, upon close
scrutiny, in the historical university. Social historians would do well to read
the arguments concerning patriarchy, political correctness, text analysis, and
postmodern discourse. Marxist theory is frequently used to analyze relations
comparatively within society and the university between genders and
intra-gender. Importantly, while discussing theory and practice, historical
relativism is given proper acknowledgement. Marxist ideology is discussed with
refreshingly thoughtful historical provisos (pp. 44, 80); objectifying powers
of sociological texts are studied temporally (pp. 53, 80); the ruling relations
are noted since the seventeenth century as having varying and historical
degrees of generally increasing pervasiveness, promoting a consciousness of
gender differentiation (p. 91); and the knower, an active agent in the social
relations of discourse, is not a transcendent subject but Asituated in the actualities of her own
living@ (p. 98), which Smith time and again
cautions is lost in sociological texts. The social itself, or Athe ongoing concerting and coordinating
of individuals= activities,@ inseparable from Aactual people and [their activities]@ (6), is, at its core, sensitive to time
and space: Aan on-going process...in time and in
actual local sites of people=s bodily existence@ (p. 97). Slams against some streams of
feminist thought vilify feminism for discounting the socio-intellectual context
of the day; here, Writing the Social=s very thesis is cognizant of historical context, which is doubly
impressive when, with considerable sensitivity, Smith intuitively delineates
the nuances and relationships of cerebral feminist, linguistic, and social
theories of the present and past. A definite strength of Writing the
Social is the very purpose of this inquiry. Smith is on a journey of
discovery as a woman, feminist, person, and mother in subjective existence,
fighting objectifying (and very powerful) discourses and relations; she is
above all inquisitive. Knowledge in all its forms should be fluid and diverse,
and the elusive and active nature of Atruth@ is always in question. Once again, this
critical approach is historically aware. AKnowledge...is always in time, always in action
among people...@ Smith acknowledges her Aconcern to explore text-mediated
discourse as social relations coordinating multiple historical sites and the
locally bound activities of local people@ (p. 158). What is at the core of how we are
incessantly influenced, or coerced, into acting by and reacting to others who
effectively determine our everyday/everynight living?
As a personal, reflective intellectual
journey of sociological thought presented in essay form, Writing the Social
succeeds in enthralling the reader as an extended text on a woman=s struggle with prevailing social and
academic practices. Historians of higher education can profit from reading the
book, not least for its revisiting of the lamentably faint respect for
alternative voices in the academy. The chapter on ATexts and Repression: Hazards for Feminists in the
Academy@ is particularly interesting, as it
delves into the unified and co-ordinating framing of Aexperience, perspective, and interest@ (p. 196) of divergent voices
characteristic of the early 1990s Achilly
climate@ in the Political Science department at
Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia. The gendered grievance
was quickly and acrimoniously organized into institutional and juridical
discourse B a death knell for sure. Has this kind of
objectifying practice happened at other universities throughout time? Smith=s dialogue provides food for thought.
Writing the Social confidently goes beyond what it
critically engages B postmodernism=s eschewing of that which exists independent of
discourse, and this aversion=s effect in propelling the theory=s fall into the patterned discourse it is
trying to deconstruct B and succeeds in adding to what many
claim to be postmodern theory=s greatest weakness. Writing the
Social not only challenges but cogently offers solutions to the
objectification of knowledge/the knower and the lack of women=s lived experience and voice apparent and
influential in the discursive order and texts in society, institutions,
political economy, and the university. The problem, oft-stated in the book,
indicates just how restrictive and oppressive sociological texts can be by
nullifying subjective individual experience and perspective. Other voices
outside the ruling relations and objectifying disciplinary practices are Asubdued,@ Aregulated,@ Astandardized,@ Aconsolidated,@ and Aorganized@ (pp. 146-56). Idealistic as it is
laudable, Smith=s solution involves examining the ruling
relations, Anot only in respect to their content, but
also in respect to the relations among people they organize@ (p. 94) B in other words, deconstructing dominant discourses
and authority. Further, Smith concludes that the solution involves properly
using theory as a form of communication to Atogether ...find out@ which part of the intellectual Abeast@ myriad sociology researchers are holding. Any work
that postulates the need for rational discussion based on looking outside the
box of traditional socio-historical theory to reveal new perspectives on
discursive practices to confront exploitative relations which Astand over against us and overpower our
lives@ (p. 228) is worth a look.
Paul Stortz
University of Calgary
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