Bullying in secondary schools: through a discursive lens |
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Authors: | Anne Ryan Mandy Morgan |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Psychology , Massey University , Palmerston North, New Zealand anne.ryan@xtra.co.nz;3. School of Psychology , Massey University , Palmerston North, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | Abstract This paper analyses students’ constructions of bullying from a social constructionist perspective. Interviews were conducted with 24 students at a small semi-rural secondary school in New Zealand. These were taped, transcribed and a discourse analysis, informed by the work of Foucault, was carried out. It was found that students made sense of bullying by drawing on constructions that included bullying as a consequence of differences and as a form of discipline. These constructions had the effect of legitimizing the school's institutional power imbalance. This was supported by students and teachers who both played an active role in simultaneously enforcing, and being subjected to, the disciplinary technologies of normalization characterized by bullying. The goal of this research is to provide a critical focus to the political nature, power relations and ideological effects of these prevailing discourses that function to both create and support bullying behaviour in our schools. |
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Keywords: | bullying secondary school Foucault discourse analysis social constructionism |
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