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Castro, P. & Santos, T. R. (2020). Dialogues with the absent other: using reported speech and the vocabulary of citizenship for contesting ecological laws and institutions . Discourse and Society. 31 (3), 249-267
F. P. Castro and T. R. Santos, "Dialogues with the absent other: using reported speech and the vocabulary of citizenship for contesting ecological laws and institutions ", in Discourse and Society, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 249-267, 2020
@article{castro2020_1732407567661, author = "Castro, P. and Santos, T. R.", title = "Dialogues with the absent other: using reported speech and the vocabulary of citizenship for contesting ecological laws and institutions ", journal = "Discourse and Society", year = "2020", volume = "31", number = "3", doi = "10.1177/0957926519889126", pages = "249-267", url = "https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0957926519889126" }
TY - JOUR TI - Dialogues with the absent other: using reported speech and the vocabulary of citizenship for contesting ecological laws and institutions T2 - Discourse and Society VL - 31 IS - 3 AU - Castro, P. AU - Santos, T. R. PY - 2020 SP - 249-267 SN - 0957-9265 DO - 10.1177/0957926519889126 UR - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0957926519889126 AB - This article examines how a professional group articulates views of the new laws and institutions that call them to accept new practices and new meaning in the name of the ecological common good. Drawing on a framework integrating the approach of social representations and rhetorical social psychology with legal institutionalism, we analyze in-depth interviews and focus groups (n = 29) with artisanal fishers. We explore how fishers use reported speech, that is, the quotation of others or self in own discourse, for building representations of Self, institutional-Others and their relations, examining also the values and dimensions of citizenship they mobilize with it. We show how fishers consistently use reported speech for presenting a negative institutional-Other acting in disrespect of the civil and political dimensions of citizenship, and a positive Self acting as a competent citizen – although rarely as a good ecological citizen. We discuss how focusing on reported speech by drawing on a theorization of how the institutional dimension interacts with the micro-level of interaction and discourse extends current comprehension of how contestation of the new meaning embedded in new laws can be warranted and maintained. ER -