Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa

South Africa has a colonial and apartheid past of social injustice, epistemological oppression, and exclusion. These mechanisms are historically inscribed in the designs, practices, and content of higher education—including in occupational therapy curriculum. If these historical markers are not cons...

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Main Authors: Tania Rauch van der Merwe, Elelwani L. Ramugondo, André Keet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-07-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/12/7/393
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author Tania Rauch van der Merwe
Elelwani L. Ramugondo
André Keet
author_facet Tania Rauch van der Merwe
Elelwani L. Ramugondo
André Keet
author_sort Tania Rauch van der Merwe
collection DOAJ
description South Africa has a colonial and apartheid past of social injustice, epistemological oppression, and exclusion. These mechanisms are historically inscribed in the designs, practices, and content of higher education—including in occupational therapy curriculum. If these historical markers are not consciously interrogated, patterns of reproduction are reified along the fault lines that already exist in society. The focus of this article is to demonstrate how an archaeological Foucauldian method was crafted from foundational Foucauldian archaeology analytics and existing approaches of Foucauldian discourse analysis to unearth the rules of the formation of the occupational therapy profession. These rules pertain to the formation of (a) the ‘ideal occupational therapist’; (b) who had a say about the profession; (c) the ways of preferred reasoning; and (d) underlying theoretical themes and perspectives about the future. Data sources for this archaeology analytics included commemorative documents of universities on the origin of their programmes; historical regulatory documents; and the South African Journal of Occupational Therapy archive from the period 1953–1994. The analysis rendered two subthemes for each of the rules of formation including ‘white exceptionalism’, white male national, and international, regulatory bodies, the profession’s know-how practical knowledge, and its need for recognition within a bio-medical paradigm. Unearthing the historical markers of a curriculum and viewing it as discourse may enable a conscious reconfiguration thereof.
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spelling doaj.art-37fff11b45ff44e4bc3a6df896faca6c2023-11-18T21:22:12ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602023-07-0112739310.3390/socsci12070393Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South AfricaTania Rauch van der Merwe0Elelwani L. Ramugondo1André Keet2Department of Occupational Therapy, School of Therapeutic Sciences University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2193, South AfricaTransformation, Student Affairs and Social Responsiveness, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7701, South AfricaRectorate: Engagement and Transformation, Centre for Critical Studies, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth 6001, South AfricaSouth Africa has a colonial and apartheid past of social injustice, epistemological oppression, and exclusion. These mechanisms are historically inscribed in the designs, practices, and content of higher education—including in occupational therapy curriculum. If these historical markers are not consciously interrogated, patterns of reproduction are reified along the fault lines that already exist in society. The focus of this article is to demonstrate how an archaeological Foucauldian method was crafted from foundational Foucauldian archaeology analytics and existing approaches of Foucauldian discourse analysis to unearth the rules of the formation of the occupational therapy profession. These rules pertain to the formation of (a) the ‘ideal occupational therapist’; (b) who had a say about the profession; (c) the ways of preferred reasoning; and (d) underlying theoretical themes and perspectives about the future. Data sources for this archaeology analytics included commemorative documents of universities on the origin of their programmes; historical regulatory documents; and the South African Journal of Occupational Therapy archive from the period 1953–1994. The analysis rendered two subthemes for each of the rules of formation including ‘white exceptionalism’, white male national, and international, regulatory bodies, the profession’s know-how practical knowledge, and its need for recognition within a bio-medical paradigm. Unearthing the historical markers of a curriculum and viewing it as discourse may enable a conscious reconfiguration thereof.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/12/7/393critical discourse analysisFoucauldian archaeologyoccupational therapy curriculum
spellingShingle Tania Rauch van der Merwe
Elelwani L. Ramugondo
André Keet
Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
Social Sciences
critical discourse analysis
Foucauldian archaeology
occupational therapy curriculum
title Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
title_full Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
title_fullStr Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
title_short Crafting a Foucauldian Archaeology Method: A Critical Analysis of Occupational Therapy Curriculum-as-Discourse, South Africa
title_sort crafting a foucauldian archaeology method a critical analysis of occupational therapy curriculum as discourse south africa
topic critical discourse analysis
Foucauldian archaeology
occupational therapy curriculum
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/12/7/393
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