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  1. Silence: A Politics.Kennan Ferguson - 2003 - Contemporary Political Theory 2 (1):49-65.
    This article investigates the unfamiliar political implications of silence. Generally regarded as simply a lack of speech imposed upon the powerless, silence is thereby positioned as inimical to politics. In a normatively constituted lingual politics, silence's role can never be more than that of absence. The subsequent understanding that silence can operate as resistance to domination has opened original and ground-breaking treatments of its role in political practice. However, the argument here moves beyond this simple dualism, examining how silence does (...)
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  • How to Do Things with Words: The William James Lectures Delivered in Harvard University in 1955.J. L. Austin - 1962 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
    First published in 1962, contains the William James Lectures delivered at Harvard University in 1955. It sets out Austin's conclusions in the field to which he directed his main efforts for at least the last ten years of his life. Starting from an exhaustive examination of his already well- known distinction of performative utterances from statements, Austin here finally abandons that distinction, replacing it by a more general theory of 'illocutionary forces' of utterances which has important bearings on a wide (...)
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  • Silence: A Politics.Matt Cavanagh - 2003 - Contemporary Political Theory 2 (1):49-65.
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  • The Problem of Silence in Feminist Psychology.Maureen A. Mahoney - 1996 - Feminist Studies 22 (3):603.
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