"Truth regime" is a much used but little theorized concept, with the Foucauldian literature presupposing that truth in modernity is uniformly scientific/ quasi-scientific and enhances power. I argue that the forms of truth characteristic of our present are wider than Foucault recognized, their relations to power more various, and their historicity more complex. The truth regime of advanced modernity is characterized by multiple, irreducible truth formulae that co-exist and sometimes vie for dominance. A truth formula stabilizes a network of elements: a relation between representation and presentation (words and things), truth and non-truth, and the place of the subject in discourse. Our contemporary truth regime comprises radically heterogeneous truthful knowledges - science, governance, religion/politics, and common culture - that have distinct histories and relations to power. © Canadian Journal of Sociology.
CITATION STYLE
Weir, L. (2008). The concept of truth regime. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 33(2), 367–390. https://doi.org/10.29173/cjs608
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