Share
Bakhtin and the Human Sciences
No Last Words
Edited by:
- Michael E Gardiner - University of Western Ontario, Canada
- Michael Mayerfeld Bell - University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA
September 1998 | 256 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
What are we to make of Bakhtin? Nearly 20 years after his death, the full richness of his ideas has still not been digested. For many people working in the sicial sciences, he remains a mysterious and impenetrable writer. Many are conscious that his ideas are relevant for sociology and cultural studies, but would be hard pressed to give chapter and verse. Others regard Bakhtin as a figure who contributed to the literary and philologic fields of study.
This accessible and thoughtful text aims to demonstrate the relevance of Bakhtin to the human sciences. It argues that most of the current literature has been characterized by a superficial appropriation of Bakhtinian ideas and neologisms. What has been neglected is a serious engagement with his core ideas and a sustained reflection on their implications for social and cultural theory. The book aims to extend BakhtinÆs ideas into the mainstream social sciences and to reconsider Bakhtin as a social thinker, not just as a literary theorist. The contributors have diverse backgrounds in the social and human sciences. The contributions are organized around the four main themes in BakhtinÆs work: dialogics, carnivals, conversations, and ethics and everyday life. The book is equipped with a lively introduction that discusses the importance of Bakhtin as a major intellectual figure and attempts to situate his ideas in current theoretical trends and developments. Suggestive, accurate, and insightful, this book will be of interest to students and researchers working in the fields of the sociology of culture and cultural studies.
INTRODUCTIONS
Michael Gardiner and Michael Mayerfeld Bell
Bakhtin and the Human Sciences
PART TWO: DIALOGICS
John Shotter and Michael Billig
A Bakhtinian Psychology
Jennifer De Peuter
The Dialogics of Narrative Identity
Michael Mayerfeld Bell
Culture as Dialogue
Dorothy Smith
Bakhtin and the Dialogic of Society
PART THREE: CARNIVALS
Peter Hitchcock
The Grotesque of the Body Electric
Hwa Yol Jung
Bakhtin's Dialogical Body Politics
Michael Bernard-Donals
Knowing the Subaltern
PART FOUR: CONVERSATIONS
Michael Gardiner
'The Incomparable Monster of Solipsism'
Raymond A Morrow
Bakhtin and Mannheim
Ian Burkitt
The Death and Rebirth of the Author
PART FIVE: ETHICS AND EVERYDAY LIVES
Courtney Bender
Bakhtinian Perspectives on 'Everyday Life' Sociology
Barry Sandywell
The Shock of the Old
Greg Nielsen
The Norms of Answerability