Assemblage theory, occupational science, and the complexity of human agency
Date
2009
Authors
Sellar, B.
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Journal article
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Journal of Occupational Science, 2009; 67(2):16-74
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Abstract
Occupational science has increasingly turned to complexity sciences and philosophy to articulate the intricacies of human occupation and overcome simplistic dualisms. Yet the dissolution of such dichotomies as human/non‐human or active/passive within these models makes locating human agency in them challenging. I turn to DeLanda's assemblage theory to propose a way of reconsidering agency in complex systems. Assemblage theory intersects with complexity theory and its capacity to account for both human and non‐human processes makes it highly relevant to occupational science. Occupational science, framed as a disciplinary assemblage, is used to direct focus upon two key aspects of assemblage theory: the significance of relations; and territory formation as a dynamic process. Agency, an issue of great importance to a field concerned with human occupation and action, is finally considered as an emerging product of the assemblage, to problematise the dualistic opposition of human activity and environmental passivity.
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Copyright 2009 Association for the Journal of Occupational Science