ABSTRACT

Being able to account for issues of representation within (N, 0), we situate our system within the historical context birthing the study of Articulation theories in the socio-cultural and political sphere. Initiated by the Jamaican-British sociologist and cultural theorist Stuart Hall at a UNESCO conference in 1980, Hall called for researchers to provide a formal theory of Articulation to effectively model how relations of subordination and dominance emerge, not merely catalog the effects of what we've assumed to be the case or have previously measured only to substantiate already entrenched views.