Assemblage Theory and Its Discontents
Ian Buchanan University of Wollongong
At least since the publication of Taylor Webb’s landmark work Teacher
Assemblage there has been a high level of interest in Deleuze and
Guattari’s work in Education Studies. Undoubtedly the major reason
for this interest is the perceived close connection between Deleuze
and Guattari’s concept of the assemblage and Foucault’s concepts
of power and governmentality. Webb explicitly situates his work at
this intersection of these three concepts, with the aim of using the
combination to map the effects of surveillance on teachers (Webb
2009: 30). Webb’s work offers a salient reminder too that assemblage
theory, at its origin in the work of Deleuze and Guattari, was always
concerned about questions of power. This aspect of assemblage theory
is all too often forgotten, making the assemblage seem as though it is
merely another way of saying something is complicated. This reminder
is urgently needed because assemblage theory is rapidly gathering a
significant following in the human and social sciences. My university
library catalogue lists over 8000 journal articles across all disciplines
with the word ‘assemblage’ in the title. There can be no question that it
has generated interesting and important new ways of thinking about the
complex nature of social reality but it has also drifted a long way from its
origins and in doing so a number of both small and large misprisions of
Deleuze and Guattari’s work have slipped under the radar and embedded
themselves as ‘truths’.
1
I have never been one to think that there is no such thing as a ‘right’ or
a ‘wrong’ reading, so I am going to simply go ahead and say assemblage
theory makes two kinds of error in their appropriation of Deleuze
and Guattari: (1) it focuses on the complex and undecidable (Actor
Network Theory); and/or (2) it focuses on the problem of emergence
(DeLanda). It may be that these are providential errors because they
Deleuze Studies 9.3 (2015): 382–392
DOI: 10.3366/dls.2015.0193
© Edinburgh University Press
www.euppublishing.com/journal/dls