Charland
Maurice Charland’s
article Constitutive Rhetoric: The Case of the Peuple Quebecois felt like the
paper version of the class we had about discourse. Charland’s insight is that
we all live in some sort of discourse, and the case of the Peuple Quebecois was
an example of a failed defined and recognized discourse within a country. For
the Quebecois, and those in the past like them, felt a need for sovereignty
from Canada because it helped the essence of life for them. This conflict continually
expresses itself in civil wars and identity debates, and I wonder if that is
one of the basic human right.
In the case of
Quebec, it was a strong 45% of the population that agreed to The White Paper’s
suggestion, yet it fell short of the majority. This case reminded me of the
time when of the failed Annexation of Texas and the civil war. Here, the
disagreement was resolved within paper while Texas and the civil war was messy.
This leads me to the issue that I wonder which is if Texas of the South won in
the civil war, would history be written differently. If the South had won,
would we have more lines on the globe, one saying the United States of America
and in the south, it would say The Confederate States of America (CSA for
short). It is the winners who decide what label to call the discourse. And within
the hegemonic discourse, other subgroups that contain subjects may be able to
create their own discourse. However, they must be recognized by the hegemonic
discourse to exist.
Another issue Charland
address which piqued my interest was on page 147, he says “audiences do not exist
outside rhetoric, merely addressed by it, but live inside rhetoric” which is
the exact summary of how discourse as discussed in class. However, something
disagreed with me when I read “from the moment they enter into the world of language,
they are subjects; the moment of recognition of an address constitutes an entry
into subject position to which inheres a set of motives that render a
rhetorical discourse intelligible” From the past class, I was under the
impression that by claiming any identity, that the person became an active part
of the discourse.
I am still
unclear of the definition of constitutive rhetoric. However, I do remember
Charland connecting Constitutive rhetoric with national identity and that the
subjects have their own narratives. A usual common identity for us would be our
national identity. In my Communication 240 class, I do remember the professor explaining
the trouble in the Middle East is the lack of national identity. So I wonder if
their constitutive rhetoric (?) is their ethnicity which is Arab instead of
national identity.
Maurice Charland

Hi Thu,
ReplyDeleteI like the connection you made to the article and the lecture about discourse because I think the two are very much related. When I read the quote that you provided from page 147, I had a different take away. I don't think Charland would disagree that taking on an identity makes you an active part of the discourse. I think his point was that once you enter into the language of the constitutive rhetoric you take a subject position, and because that subject position is within the boundaries of the discourse the subject must adhere to the prescribed set of motives.