Nursing Theory, Postmodernism, Post-structuralism and Foucoult critiques mainstream American nursing theory and its use of post-structural theory, comparing and contrasting how postmodern and post-structural ideas have been used fruitfully in nursing research and theorizing elsewhere.
In the late 1980s, references to post-structuralism and Michel Foucault started to appear in nursing journals. Since then, hundreds of nursing publications have cited postmodernism and key post-structural ideas such as power/knowledge, discourse, and de-centering the human subject. In Nursing Theory, Postmodernism, Post-structuralism and Foucoult Olga Petrovskaya argues that the application of these ideas is markedly different in American nursing theory scholarship compared to nursing theoretical scholarship generated outside the canon of unique nursing theory. Analyzing relevant literature from the late 1980s through 2010s, she demonstrates this difference, arguing that American nursing theory calcified into a matrix of dogmas built on logical positivism, wary of borrowed theory, and loyal to a unique nursing science. Post-structural ideas that fit the matrix such as criticism of medicine are sanctioned, whereas ideas skeptical of humanistic agendas including those that challenge American nursing theory are rendered meaningless. In contrast, other nurse scholars, from Britain, Australia, Canada, and what the author calls the American enclave group, engaged with postmodern and post-structural perspectives to enrich their research and invite readers to rethink nursing practice. The book showcases examples of their intelligent, creative theorizing. Arguing that American nursing theory enervated nursing theorizing, Petrovskaya calls for opening this matrix to theoretical and methodological creativity, less rigid categories of scholarship, and healthy self-examination.
Making the case that post-structural ideas are vital for nurses' ability to critically reflect on their discipline and profession, this is a necessary read for all those interested in nursing theory, philosophy and praxis.
About the Author: Olga Petrovskaya is an assistant professor in the University of Victoria School of Nursing in British Columbia, Canada. She is an active and longstanding member of the International Philosophy of Nursing Society (IPONS), and in 2021 she was elected to serve as IPONS Vice Chair. Dr. Petrovskaya is interested in continental philosophy especially German critical theory and French post-structuralism as well as a contemporary direction in social theory called practice theory. In 2014, she won First prize in the Nursing Philosophy journal Graduate Student Writing Contest for her article, Is there Nursing Phenomenology after Paley? Dr. Petrovskaya's funded program of research combines her interest in eHealth and Health Information and Communication Technology with her interest in theoretical perspectives attuned to the socio-materiality of healthcare practices, for example, actor network theory. She teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on nursing knowledge and theory development.