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Interpellation

 
Dictionary: In·ter·pel·la·tion

n.

[L. interpellatio: cf. F. interpellation.]

1. The act of interpelling or interrupting; interruption. «Continual interpellationsBp. Hall.

2. The act of interposing or interceding; intercession.

Accepted by his interpellation and intercession.
Jer. Taylor.

3. An act of interpellating, or of demanding of an officer an explanation of his action; imperative or peremptory questioning; a point raised in a debate.

4. A official summons or citation. Ayliffe.


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Word Tutor: interpellation
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - The action of providing a remark that breaks the continuity; (parliament) a procedure of demanding that a government official explain some act or policy.

WordNet: interpellation
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has 2 meanings:

Meaning #1: a procedure (in some parliaments) of demanding that a government official explain some act or policy

Meaning #2: the action of interjecting or interposing an action or remark that interrupts
  Synonyms: interjection, interposition, interpolation


Wikipedia: Interpellation
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Interpellation is used in three senses. In English, the parliamentary questioning sense dates from the late 19th century.

Contents

In Neo-Marxist thought

Interpellation is a concept of Marxist philosopher Louis Althusser to describe the process by which ideology addresses the (abstract) pre-ideological individual thus effectively producing him or her as subject proper. Henceforth, Althusser goes against the classical definition of the subject as cause and substance: in other words, the situation always precedes the (individual or collective) subject, which precisely as subject is "always-already interpellated." Althusser's argument here strongly draws from Jacques Lacan's concept of the Mirror stage. Althusser's concept has been roundly confused over the last decades with concepts and thinking associated with Michel Foucault, in part because both thinkers manifest an antihumanist insistence on the secondary status of the subject as mere effect of social relations and not vice versa. Another source of this confusion, as elaborated in an article by Sawyer (2002) is the shared use of the word but different concepts of discourse. Interpellation, Althusser's idea based on Lacan, specifically involves the moment and process of recognition of interaction with the ideology at hand. Foucault eschews the notion of ideology and his structuralist analytics are quite antithetical to Lacanian notions of Real, Symbolic, Imaginary.


Sawyer, R. Keith. 2002. A Discourse on Discourse: An Archaeological History of an Intellectual Concept. Cultural Studies, vol. 16 (3): 433-456.

Interpellation in the context of social science

In the context of Social Science to be Interpellated is to identify with a particular idea or identity. For example, if someone were to shout your name at you in the street, you would recognize that salutation to mean yourself. It is basically thinking 'that means me'. It is the process by which you recognise yourself to belong to a particular identity.

Interpellation as a right of a parliament

The word Interpellation is also used to refer to the formal right of a parliament to submit formal questions to the government. In many parliaments, each individual member of parliament has the right to formally submit questions (possibly a limited amount during a certain period of time) to a member of government. The respective minister or secretary is then required to respond and to justify government policy. Interpellation thus allows the parliament to supervise the government's activity. In this sense, it is closer to a motion of censure.

References

  • Louis Althusser, Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses (I.S.A.) published in English in Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays, available online here



 
 
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