What is it about?

This article draws on an industrial dispute over the filming of The Hobbit in New Zealand in 2010 to contribute to the theorisation of the interplay between interests and identities and our understanding of mobilisation and collective identity.

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Why is it important?

While industrial disputes are typically viewed as a conflict between groups with opposing material interests, this may miss the way in which both the identities of those involved and their interests are discursively constituted in articulatory processes. Specifically, we apply Laclau and Mouffe’s discourse theory and in doing so demonstrate that the dispute was more than a conflict over working conditions, it was a hegemonic struggle to fix meaning. In making this conceptual contribution we highlight a tendency within industrial relations analysis to reify interests.

Perspectives

This paper grew out of a teaching case we wrote on The Hobbit industrial dispute.

Associate Professor Todd Bridgman
Victoria University of Wellington

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: The battle for ‘Middle-earth’: The constitution of interests and identities in The Hobbit dispute, Journal of Industrial Relations, August 2017, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0022185617714293.
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