The Bakhtin Circle: Philosophy, Culture and PoliticsPluto Press, 20. maj 2002 - 221 sider Mikhail Bakhtin and the group of thinkers known as the Bakhtin Circle have had a massive influence on contemporary literary and cultural theory. Bakhtin is recognised as perhaps the key theorist on the novel as a genre, and his writings on carnival in popular culture are a recurrent theme in cultural studies. The influence of the Circle has recently spread into social theory, philosophy and psychology, which means that a narrow literary approach is now inadequate for fully understanding the breadth of their ideas. Moreover, recent research has revolutionised our understanding of the work of the Bakhtin Circle and retranslation has shown that many of the existing translations are significantly flawed. It is also now clear that the work of the Circle was the product of discussions between members of an extraordinary group of scholars. This is the first book to bring together this significant new research on the Circle, setting it within a historical and intellectual context and emphasising the importance of the work of the Circle as a whole. Craig Brandist offers a new look at the significance of Bakhtin's legacy, and brings into clearer focus the contribution of others in the circle--including Voloshinov, Medvedev, Pumpianskii and Kagan--whose work has so often been obscured, assessing the fundamental role they played in shaping Bakhtinian thought. |
Indhold
The Early Ethical and Aesthetic Philosophy | 24 |
Matvei Kagan | 32 |
From ethics to literature | 40 |
Copyright | |
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aesthetic activity analysis artistic Author and Hero Bakhtin argues Bakhtin Circle Bakhtin's early Bakhtinian becomes Bildungsroman Brandist Bühler Bukharin carnival Cassirer Cassirer's Circle's cognition consciousness critical developed dialectic dialogue discourse discursive genres Dostoevsky book Dostoevsky study epic Ernst Cassirer essay ethical formal Formalists Freidenberg German Gestalt theory Goethe Graz School Hegel Hegelian heteroglossia human sciences ideas ideological important individual influence inner form intellectual interaction intersubjective Kagan Karl Bühler laughter linguistic literary literature M.M. Bakhtin Marburg School Marr Marxism material meaning Menippean satire MFIa monologic neo-Kantian Nikolai Marr notion novel novelist objective culture objective validity perspective phenomenological philosophy of language poetic position present principles problem psychology Rabelais realm relations Renaissance Russian Scheler sense significance Simmel social sociological Socratic dialogue Soviet specific Stephan Witasek structure symbolic forms thinkers Tihanov trans unity utterance Voloshinov and Medvedev word world-view