Deutsch
Espaņol
Home Inside FQS Features Services Submission FAQ Press + Advertising
Search Print
Thematic Issues
Debates
Reviews
Interviews
Conferences
Links
 

Volume 7, No. 2, Art. 15 – March 2006

Review:

Walburga Freitag (2005). Contergan. Eine genealogische Studie des Zusammenhangs wissenschaftlicher Diskurse und biographischer Erfahrungen [Contergan. A Genealogical Study on Scientific Discourse and Biography]

Anne Klein (Germany)

Abstract: In this genealogical study, Walburga FREITAG explores the conditions of subjectivity-building in relation to the powerful medical discourse on Contergan. The discourse theory of Michel FOUCAULT dominates the key words for the empirical research: discourse, knowledge, power and body. The study aims to describe a transformation process, starting as a "knowledge object" and ending as a "knowledge subject." Methodologically based on grounded theory, the study consists of two discourse-analytical reconstructions: one concerning the scientific foundations of inclusion and exclusion, and the other dealing with the personal experience of discrimination and emancipation. By juxtaposing the medical opinion and the biographical "true" knowledge Walburga FREITAG succeeds in drawing a picture of the moral grammar and the historical-political meaning of this social conflict. The connection of discourse analysis and biographical narratives is not only methodologically innovative but also produces new knowledge concerning the discursive relation of society, subjectivity and science.

Key words: discourse analysis, history, biography, disability studies, grounded theory, social movements

This contribution is only available as a full text in the German language. German text


Last update: 26.01.2006

Volume 7, No. 2   Table of Contents

[qualitative-research.net] [Home] [Inside FQS] [Features] [Services] [Submission]
[FAQ] [Advertising] [Search FQS] [Newsletter] [Editorial Team]

© 2006 Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research
(ISSN 1438-5627)

Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft