This edited book brings together humanities and social sciences scholars from the various disciplines at the nexus of discourse studies and ethnography to reflect on questions of institutional practices and their political concerns. Institutional order plays an important role in structuring power relations in society. Yet, contrary to common understandings of structure, institutional orders are far from fixed or stable. They constantly change, and they are resisted and reimagined by social actors. The 20 studies collected in this edited volume develop the notion of institutionality as an overarching perspective to explore how institutional actors and institutional practices order and reorder power in societies across the globe. Thereby the chapters pay special attention to the fluidity, volatility, fragility, and ambiguity of order, and consequently to its claims to authority. Employing a broad range of discourse analytic and ethnographic methodologies, the studies show how institutions are discursively and materially constructed, defined, represented and how they are made relevant and become powerful or how they are resisted, transformed or lose significance in interaction. Readers will obtain nuanced insights into ways in which differently positioned social actors engage in struggles about how institutions can be imagined and enacted across several domains, such as workplace interactions, architecture, mass-media representations or organisational publicity. This book will be of interest to readers in Applied Linguistics, Discourse and Society, Critical Discourse Analysis, Political Theory and Communication Studies.
Chapter 1: INTRODUCTION.- Part I. Workplace Interaction.- CHAPTER 2:
Beyond deontics: Power relations in decision-making processes in management
meetings.
Chapter 3: we are in the hands of the head office (.): Managing
a multinational institution in decision-making meeting talk.
Chapter 4:
Categorisation work in extremism prevention: Institutional design and
recipient adaptation.- Part II. Bodies, Architecture and Space.
Chapter 5:
Beyond strategy and tactics: On the micropolitics of organisational
aesthetics.
Chapter 6: Silent coercion: The materiality of welfare waiting
rooms after the welfare reform.
Chapter 7: Teaching about racism within
institutional whiteness in Germany.
Chapter 8: Institutional Occidentalism:
On the connection between police constitutions of space and institutional
racism.
Chapter 9: Time, affect, knowledge: The embodied institution of
social protest movements.- Part III. Mass Media Representations.
Chapter 10:
Style as discursive practice in the multimodal construction of identity:
Towards a social media disposit if analysis.
Chapter 11: Arguing by common
sense: Institutionality and media discourses in France.
Chapter 12:
Naturalising populism as a collaborative interactional practice in broadcast
media.
Chapter 13: Question design and press-state relations: The case of
U.S. presidential news conferences.- Part IV. Organisational Publicity.-
Chapter 14: Institutionality in Anglophone and Japan university job
advertisements: A critical discourse analysis of representations of academic
work.
Chapter 15: Asias Global University: Academic event posters as
branding devices for a Hong Kong university.
Chapter 16: Dont take us
seriously: The case of satirical narratives of institutional self-promotion
in Swedish military recruitment.- Part V. Legitimising Knowledge and Power.-
Chapter 17: Questioning intercultural opening and cultural diversity:
Discursive and organizational strategies of forced migrants labour market
integration.
Chapter 18: Narrative construction of power and knowledge in
the police: Suspicion and defining the deviant.
Chapter 19: The discourse by
the Executive Board of the European Central Bank (ECB) from 2007 to 2015:
What austerity inflection after the financial crisis?.
Chapter 20:
Economists in social media: The discursive construction of expertise between
media, politics and academia.
Chapter 21: Distributed knowledge, distributed
power: A sociolinguistics of structuration.
Chapter 22: CONCLUSION:
Revisiting institutionality: Imaginaries and practices of (re)ordering.
Yannik Porsché is a Researcher and Lecturer in Sociology at the University of the Bundeswehr, Munich in Germany.
Ronny Scholz is a Senior Lecturer in Media Research and Media Criticism at the British University in Egypt.
Jaspal Naveel Singh is a Lecturer of Applied Linguistics at the Open University in the UK.