Abstract
While we welcome Gergen's (1997) comments, we dispute a number of his criticisms. First, actor-network theory (ANT) does not reduce persons to autonoma. Rather, its prime aim is to account for the emergence of persons within a network. Similarly, ANT does not draw back from attributing responsibility; rather, it examines how the responsibility of actors (whether they be `bad' decision-makers or `entrepreneurial' scientists) is established. Next, contrary to Gergen's view of institutional pressures as `occupational hazards', we reassert the importance of seeing these as partially constitutive of academic (postmodern psychological) activity. Finally, while we agree with Gergen that all academic `tellings' privilege some form of ontology, we argue that this does not warrant an exclusively cultural ontology.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
