Switch to: References

Citations of:

Toward a Philosophy of the Act

Austin: University of Texas Press. Edited by Michael Holquist & Vadim Liapunov (1993)

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. M. M. Bakhtin and the German proto-Romantic tradition.John Cook - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (1):59-81.
    This paper seeks to explore the relationship between Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin’s theoretical apparatus and ideas of the immediate precursors of the Jena Romantik school of German Romanticism: Johann Georg Hamann (1730–1788) and Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803). In doing so, it examines the themes and treatments that are common to these two thinkers and Bakhtin, tracing the tradition of anti-systematic thought through Hamann, Nietzsche and Bakhtin, and the transmission of Herder’s philosophy of Bildung through the Russian cultural milieu and Goethe. Initially, (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Resilience of Occupational Culture in Contemporary Workplaces.Yves Clot - 2014 - Critical Horizons 15 (2):131-149.
    In France, the notion of “métier” continues to represent a major reference point in current discussions on work issues, both in theory and in public discourse. The “métier” encapsulates the set of specialized technical knowledge, bodily and mental skills, accepted interpersonal conventions and modes of behaviour, which characterize what could be called in English an “occupational culture”, the specific professional knowledge, culture and ethos of an occupation. The article analyses the psychological and cultural instances that make up a “métier” from (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Practitioner Meets Philosopher: Bakhtinian musings on learning with Paul.Mary Chen Johnsson - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (12):1252-1263.
    The stars and the planets must have been in alignment when Paul Hager needed a doctoral student to work on his research grant at the same time that I had transitioned from 20 years as business practitioner to become an educator interested in workplace learning. This paper explores the Bakhtinian ways in which I learned about learning with Paul, and how our process of engagement continues to influence my appreciation of the philosophy and practice of education. In such musings, I (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Authoring Selves in Language Teaching: A Dialogic Approach to Language Teacher Psychology.Shan Chen, Lawrence Jun Zhang & Judy M. Parr - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The teacher self is a composite psychological construct which encompasses the cognitive, affective, emotional, and social dimensions of teaching. This qualitative study draws on Bakhtin’s concepts of dialogism, answerability, and addressivity to discuss how English language teachers negotiated the shifting and conflictive context to construct selves in relation to the promoted communicative language teaching approach. Based on narrative interviews and classroom observations with five tertiary English teachers in China, we found that these teachers were actively engaged in the dialog with (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • In Truth We Trust: Discourse, Phenomenology, and the Social Relations of Knowledge in an Environmental Dispute.Michael S. Carolan & Michael M. Bell - 2003 - Environmental Values 12 (2):225-245.
    In this age of debate it is not news that what constitutes 'truth' is often at issue in environmental debates. But what is often missed is an insight that the speakers of Middle English understood a millennium ago: that truth comes from trust, which, is the central theoretical position of this paper. Our point is that truth depends essentially on social relations – relations that involve power and knowledge, to be sure, but also identity. Thus, challenges to what constitutes the (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  • Superaddressee or Who Will Succeed a Mentor?Lyudmila Bryzzheva - 2006 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 25 (3):227-243.
    This philosophical essay is inspired by a four-year pedagogical relationship that continues in its altered form today. The main focus of this piece is the transformation of a mentor as an immediate addressee into mentor as a superaddressee, an influential third listener who oversees observable dialogues. I explore the mutual responsibilities of a student and a mentor in order to uncover the elements in the pedagogical chemistry responsible for the transformation of an addressee into a superaddressee. Confirmation (a perfect form (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • The eastern side of the circle: the contribution of Mikhail Tubjanskij.Craig Brandist - 2015 - Studies in East European Thought 67 (3-4):209-228.
    The intellectual biography of M. I. Tubjanskij is considered, setting his work within the context of the Bakhtin Circle in the mid-1920s, but considering his wider engagement with the intellectual field of the time. Tubjanskij’s passage from studies of the work of Hermann Cohen and of Plato, through his work on Buddhism, contemporary Bengali thought, especially the work of Rabindranath Tagore, to his later work on Mongolian culture is described and analysed. In conclusion it is argued that the non-European orientation (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • A Methodological Framework for Organizational Discourse Activism: an Ethics of Dispositif and Dialogue.Ann Starbæk Bager & Martin Mølholm - 2020 - Philosophy of Management 19 (1):99-126.
    In the article, we elaborate an interdisciplinary methodological framework that enables us to study and prepare the grounds for the development of organizational practices through discourse perspectives. The framework differs from mainstream monological and complexity reducing tendencies within organizational studies in that it argues for an approach that takes in historical, broad, and situational power relations and discourses into consideration when we engage in ethical organizational development. We place the framework within organizational discourse studies (ODS) and discuss how the intersection (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Who's/whose at risk? answerability and the critical possibilities of classroom discourse.Jennifer A. Vadeboncoeur & Allan Luke ‡ - 2004 - Critical Discourse Studies 1 (2):201-223.
    Our aim in this article is twofold. First, we challenge the essentialized notion of adolescents and young people as perpetually driven to resist the authority of adults. At the same time, we disrupt linguistic conceptions of adolescent discourse, along with the discourse of youth at risk, by analyzing a transcript of classroom discourse that reflects an exchange between a highly regarded and well liked preservice teacher and his students. This representative transcript highlights the preservice teacher's ability to query, without a (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Thinking in circles: Kojève and Russian Hegelianism.Isabel Jacobs - 2024 - Studies in East European Thought 76 (1):41-58.
    This paper analyzes Russian-French philosopher Alexandre Kojève’s dialogue with proponents of Hegelianism and phenomenology in Soviet Russia of the 1920–30s. Considering works by Dmytro Chyzhevsky, Ivan Ilyin, Gustav Shpet, and Alexandre Koyré, I retrace Hegelian themes in Kojève, focusing on the relation between method and time. I argue that original reflections on method played a key role in both Russian Hegelianism and Kojève’s work, from his famous Hegel lectures to the late fragments of a system. As I demonstrate, Kojève’s Hegelianism (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Attempt of Surmounting the Subject-Object Approach in Mikhail Bakhtin's Philosophy and Aesthetics.Alexander Yudin - 2013 - Sententiae 29 (2):114-126.
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Freedom and Responsibility: The Aesthetics of Free Musical Improvisation and Its Educational Implications—A View from Bakhtin.Iris M. Yob, Panagiotis A. Kanellopoulos, Karin S. Hendricks, Estelle R. Jorgensen, Patrick K. Freer & Phil Jenkins - 2011 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 19 (2):113.
    This paper aims to examine how specific aspects of Bakhtin's theoretical perspective might inform our understanding of improvisation. Moreover, it outlines the possible educational implications of such a perspective. Specifically, a sketch of a Bakhtinian conception of improvisation is proposed, a sketch which emphasizes the cultivation of an attitude of consciousness that leads to an understanding of improvised music making as an obligation to explore the unknown, to search for freedom through the responsibility to attend to the uniqueness of irrevocable (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • A Philosophy of Seeing: The Work of the Eye/‘I’ in Early Years Educational Practice.E. Jayne White - 2016 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 50 (3):474-489.
    The work of the eye has a powerful influence across culture and philosophy—not least in Goethe's approach to understanding. Aligned to aesthetic appreciation, seeing has the potential to offer an authorial gift of ‘other-ness’ when brought to bear on evaluative relationships. Yet this penetrating gaze might also be seen as limiting when put to work in the services of ‘other’. From the subtle sideways glance, to the lingering gaze of lovers, a look can mean many things. But the eye does (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Hermann Cohen and Bakhtin’s early aesthetics.Liisa Steinby - 2011 - Studies in East European Thought 63 (3):227-249.
    In this article, Bakhtin’s early aesthetics is reread in the context of Hermann Cohen’s system of philosophy, especially his aesthetics. Bakhtin’s thinking from the early ethical writing Toward a Philosophy of Act to Author and Hero in Artistic Activity and Problems of Dostoevsky’s Poetics is followed. In Author and Hero , an individual is in his life conceived as involved in cognitive and ethical action but as remaining without a consummative form; the form, or the ‘soul’, is bestowed upon a (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Phenomenology of political action.Maja Soboleva - 2022 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 11 (1):402-420.
    The article focuses on a phenomenological study of political action. The analysis includes three directions: the concept of action, paradigms that determine political actions, and the purpose of action. In the analysis of action, I first use the distinction between the concepts of “act” and “operate.” “To act” means a conscious, deliberate, rational action. In contrast, “operate” means to behave unconsciously, mechanically or automatically, passively or instinctively. The political implications of the distinction between an “acting” and “operating” person can be (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Reconfiguring Intercultural Communication Education through the dialogical relationship of Istina_(Truth) and _Pravda(Truth in Justice).Ashley Simpson - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (4):456-467.
    This conceptual paper argues for the reconfiguring of Intercultural Communication Education (ICE) through a dialogical engagement with Istina (Truth) and Pravda (Truth in Justice). The paper argues that the field of ICE is predominantly characterised by normative conceptualisations of truth (e.g., characterised by fixed or ‘objective’ interpretations of language and culture) or hyper-relativist post-truth conceptualisations (e.g., non-essentialist approaches to ICE). This conceptual paper, therefore, addresses the following research question: To what extent can a dialogical approach to truth address and redress (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Why being dialogical must come before being logical: the need for a hermeneutical–dialogical approach to robotic activities.John Shotter - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):29-35.
    Currently, our official rationality is still of a Cartesian kind; we are still embedded in a mechanistic order that takes it that separate, countable entities (spatial forms), related logically to each other, are the only ‘things’ that matter to us—an order clearly suited to advances in robotics. Unfortunately, it is an order that renders invisible ‘relational things’, non-objective things that exist in time, in the transitions from one state of affairs to another, things that ‘point’ toward possibilities in the future, (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • The dialogical nature of our inner lives.John Shotter - 1998 - Philosophical Explorations 1 (3):185 – 200.
    Classically, we have treated talk of such things as meaning, understanding, and thinking, etc., as raising problems about mental states assumed to exist inside people's heads. And in our philosophical inquiries, we have sought determinate in-principle solutions to these problems. In the dialogical, relational-responsive view of language use presented here — influenced by Wittgenstein, Bakhtin, and Voloshinov — a very different view of such talk is presented. Our 'inner lives' are not hidden 'inside' us, but are 'displayed' out 'in' the (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW]John Shotter - 1997 - Argumentation 11 (4):493-497.
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Agentive Spaces, the “Background”, and Other Not Well Articulated Influences in Shaping our Lives.John Shotter - 2013 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 43 (2):133-154.
    What is special about all our living exchanges with our surroundings is that they occur within the ceaseless, intertwined flow of many unfolding strands of spontaneously responsive, living activity. This requires us to adopt a kind of fluid, process thinking, a shift from thinking of events as occurring between things and beings existing as separate entities prior to their inter-action, to events occurring within a continuously unfolding, holistic but stranded flow of events, with no clear, already existing boundaries to be (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • A strange kind of Kantian: Bakhtin’s reinterpretation of Kant and the Marburg School.Sergeiy Sandler - 2015 - Studies in East European Thought 67 (3-4):165-182.
    This paper looks at the ways in which Mikhail Bakhtin had appropriated the ideas of Kant and of the Marburg neo-Kantian school. While Bakhtin was greatly indebted to Kantian philosophy, and is known to have referred to himself as a neo-Kantian, he rejects the main tenets of neo-Kantianism. Instead, Bakhtin offers a substantial re-interpretation of Kantian thought. His frequent borrowings from neo-Kantian philosophers (Hermann Cohen, Paul Natorp, and others) also follow a distinctive pattern of appropriation, whereby blocks of interconnected ideas (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Outline of a Marxist Commodity Theory of the Public Sphere.John Michael Roberts - 2017 - Historical Materialism 25 (1):3-35.
    In recent years, the public sphere, which represents a realm in civil society where people can debate and discuss a range of issues and common concerns important to them, has become a key area for research in the humanities and social sciences. Arguably, however, Marxist theory has yet to advance a theoretical account of the most abstract and simple ideological properties of the capitalist public sphere as these appear under universal commodity relationships. The paper therefore tentatively seeks to develop such (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (6 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Discourse or Dialogue? Habermas, the Bakhtin Circle, and the question of concrete utterances.John Michael Roberts - 2012 - Theory and Society 41 (4):395-419.
    This article argues that the Bakhtin Circle presents a more realistic theory of concrete dialogue than the theory of discourse elaborated by Habermas. The Bakhtin Circle places speech within the “concrete whole utterance” and by this phrase they mean that the study of everyday language should be analyzed through the mediations of historical social systems such as capitalism. These mediations are also characterized by a determinate set of contradictions—the capital-labor contradiction in capitalism, for example—that are reproduced in unique ways in (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • The Law Challenged and the Critique of Identity with Emmanuel Levinas.Susan Petrilli - 2021 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (1):31-69.
    Identity as traditionally conceived in mainstream Western thought is focused on theory, representation, knowledge, subjectivity and is centrally important in the works of Emmanuel Levinas. His critique of Western culture and corresponding notion of identity at its foundations typically raises the question of the other. Alterity in Levinas indicates existence of something on its own account, in itself independently of the subject’s will or consciousness. The objectivity of alterity tells of the impossible evasion of signs from their destiny, which is (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Learning and education in the global sign network.Susan Petrilli - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (234):317-420.
    The contribution that may come from the general science of signs, semiotics, to the planning and development of education and learning at all levels, from early schooling through to university education and learning should not be neglected. As Umberto Eco claims in the “Introduction” to the Italian edition of his book Semiotica and Philosophy of Language (1984: xii, my trans.), “[general semiotics] is philosophical in nature, because it does not study a particular system, but posits the general categories in light (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Action and Relation: Toward a New Theory of the Image.Helen Petrovsky - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (2):250-259.
    This article examines a changing global reality that manifests itself in new forms of social activism. The struggle of the multitude challenges political representation and contemporary art seems to corroborate this observation. Becoming a form of social intervention, it turns into an active force and leaves behind the need to double action with representation, representational practices being the hallmark of classical art. A new theory of the image would have to incorporate this dynamic: it would have to treat and develop (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Husserl, Bakhtin, and the other I. or: Mikhail M. Bakhtin – a Husserlian?Carina Pape - 2016 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 5 (2):271-289.
    Mikhail Bakhtin aimed to invent a phenomenology of the self-experience and of the experience of the other in his early work. In order to realize such a phenomenology he combined different approaches he called idealism and materialism / naturalism. The first one he linked to Edmund Husserl, but did hardly name him directly concerning his phenomenology. Does this intersubjective phenomenology give a hint that Bakhtin used Husserlian ideas more than considered yet? Or did they both invent similar ideas independently from (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Identity, agency and community: reconsidering the pedagogic responsibilities of teacher education.Josephine Moate & Maria Ruohotie-Lyhty - 2014 - British Journal of Educational Studies 62 (3):249-264.
  • Four Ages of Our Relationship with the Reality: An educationalist perspective.Eugene Matusov - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (1):61-83.
    In this article, I try to make sense conventional notions of ‘premodernism’, ‘modernism’ and ‘postmodernism’ as ways of relating to reality, and apply them to education. I argue for the additional notion of ‘neo-premodernism’ to make sense of recent attempts to engineer social reality. Each of these four approaches coexists and constitutes the four ages: the age of prayer, the age of reason, the age of social engineering and the age of responsibility. I try to trace these ages in modern (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Ethic authorial dialogism as a candidate for post-postmodernism.Eugene Matusov - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1467-1468.
    Before burying philosophical postmodernism, let me briefly appreciate its important contributions: its emphasis on human voices and human subjectivities—however, disagreeable, incomprehensible, inc...
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • ‘Giving voice’: opening up new routes in the dialogicality of social change.Ivana Marková - 2017 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 47 (3):279-285.
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Response—A Critical Response to “Discourse Communities and the Discourse of Experience”.Paul Macneill - 2022 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (1):71-77.
    In their article Little, Jordens, and Sayers developed the notion of “discourse communities”—as groups of people who share an ideology and common “language”—with the support of seminal ideas from M.M. Bakhtin. Such communities provide benefits although they may also impose constraints. An ethical community would open to others’ discourse and be committed to critique. Those commitments may counter the limitations of discourse communities. Since their paper was published in 2003, the notion of “discourse communities” has been widely adopted and applied (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Representing and Embodying a Peripheral City’s Place in the World.Tea Lobo - 2022 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 8 (1):55-69.
    In an increasingly globalizing world, the aesthetics of Dubai have become potentially available even for impoverished, peripheral cities such as Belgrade. With the explicit rhetoric of finally achi...
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Dialogical concept of consciousness in L.S. Vygotsky and G.H. Mead and its relevance for contemporary discussions on consciousness. [REVIEW]Leszek Koczanowicz - 2011 - Polish Psychological Bulletin 42 (2):65-70.
    The Dialogical concept of consciousness in L.S. Vygotsky and G.H. Mead and its relevance for contemporary discussions on consciousness In my paper I show the relevance of cultural-activity theory for solving the puzzles of the concept of consciousness which encounter contemporary philosophy. I reconstruct the main categories of cultural-activity theory as developed by M.M. Bakhtin, L.S. Vygotsky, G.H. Mead, and J. Dewey. For the concept of consciousness the most important thing is that the phenomenon of human consciousness is consider to (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Beyond dialogue and antagonism: a Bakhtinian perspective on the controversy in political theory. [REVIEW]Leszek Koczanowicz - 2011 - Theory and Society 40 (5):553-566.
    The aim of the article is to show that the contradiction between dialogue and antagonism can be overcome with the help of the idea of dialogue as developed by the Russian thinker Mikhail Bakhtin. The lack of such theory led to the rejection of liberalism or to the introduction of dialogical principle into the body of liberal politics. It was Jürgen Habermas who first understood the necessity of dialogical consensus as the basis of liberal democracy. On the other hand, Ernesto (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • What is to be done? In the age of ignorance.Kate I. Khan - 2022 - Studies in East European Thought 74 (4):557-564.
    This paper is dedicated to the issue of collective guilt and the interconnection between theoretical political thinking and ethically grounded political action, collective guilt, and personal responsibility. It assumes that facing political events in a form of media representation (such as with the war conflict in Ukraine), we mostly deal with simulacra, which affects and creates passive shock content consumption instead of active participation. The interconnection between irrational and rational ways of interpretation of political conflict is shown together with the (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Towards a Postcolonial-storytelling Theory of Management and Organisation.Kenneth Jorgensen, Anete Strand & David Boje - 2013 - Philosophy of Management 12 (1):43-66.
    A contribution to management philosophy is made here by the development of a postcolonial-storytelling theory, created by drawing together parallel developments in quantum physics and tribal peoples’ storytelling. We argue that these developments resituate the hegemonic relationship of discursive representationalism over material storytelling practices. Implications are two-fold. First, this dissolves inherent dualisms presumed in the concept of interactionamong entities like actor–structure, subject–object and discursive–nondiscursive in favour of a profound ontology of entanglement and intra-action of materiality and discourse, where storytelling is (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Learning as Calling and Responding.Lotta Jons - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 33 (5):481-493.
    According to Martin Buber’s philosophy of dialogue, our being-in-the-world is to be conceived of as an existential dialogue. Elsewhere, I have conceptualized the teacher–student-relation accordingly (see Jons 2008), as a matter of calling and responding. The conceptualization rests on a secularised notion of vocation, paving way for discovering, articulating and discerning pedagogical relations in a new way. In the present article, I take this conceptualization one step further, applying the concept of calling and responding to the pedagogical relation between a (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Ethical reasoning and the embodied, socially situated subject.Suzanne M. Jaeger - 2004 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (1):55-72.
    My discussion is concerned with how symbolic power constitutively structures our very identities in relation to one another and at the bodily level of lived experience. Although many accounts of the self and of subjectivity as socially situated have difficulties in their explanations of agency, Zaners work suggests a basis upon which the selfs independence from others can be understood. His phenomenology of embodied subjectivity explains how the emerging self presupposes presence with others. At the same time, however, co-presence also (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Persuasion and Propaganda.Ivana Marková - 2008 - Diogenes 55 (1):37-51.
    This paper aims to show that propaganda and persuasion are underlined by two forms of communication, one aiming at a monologue, and the other aiming at a dialogue, which in practice do often coexist, with one or the other prevailing at a particular time. In order to understand propaganda or persuasion, we need to study them as part of the systems (e.g. institutions, organizations, communication) to which they belong, rather than treat them as decontextualized phenomena. Both propaganda and persuasion involve (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Language as a values‐realizing activity: Caring, acting, and perceiving.Bert H. Hodges - 2015 - Zygon 50 (3):711-735.
    A problem for natural scientific accounts, psychology in particular, is the existence of value. An ecological account of values is reviewed and illustrated in three domains of research: carrying differing loads; negotiating social dilemmas involving agreement and disagreement; and timing the exposure of various visual presentations. Then it is applied in greater depth to the nature of language. As described and illustrated, values are ontological relationships that are neither subjective nor objective, but which constrain and obligate all significant animate activity (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • That Which “Has No Name in Philosophy”: Merleau-Ponty and the Language of Literature.Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan - 2007 - Human Studies 30 (4):395-409.
    In this paper I address some related aspects of Merleau-Ponty’s unfinished texts, The Visible and the Invisible and The Prose of the World. The point of departure for my reading of these works is the sense of philosophical disillusionment which underlies and motivates them, and which, I argue, leads Merleau-Ponty towards an engagement with art in general and with literature in particular. I suggest that Merleau-Ponty’s emerging conception of ethics—premised on the paradox of a “universal singularity” and concerned with the (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Between the face and the voice: Bakhtin meets Levinas. [REVIEW]Daphna Erdinast-Vulcan - 2008 - Continental Philosophy Review 41 (1):43-58.
    The essay draws on a little-known fragment from M.M. Bakhtin’s Draft Exercise Notebooks of 1943 to highlight both the affinities and the divergences of the respective philosophical projects of Bakhtin and Emmanuel Levinas. The first part of the discussion follows their parallel itineraries through several points of convergence, from a sense of profound philosophical disenchantment to a conception of the ethical subject as living on borderlines, facing the other, irremediably vulnerable and infinitely responsible. The second part focuses on the “dialogic (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Playing With Children, Answering With Our Lives: A Bakhtinian Approach To Coauthoring Ethical Identities In Early Childhood.Brian Edmiston - 2010 - British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (2):197-211.
    In this paper I develop an alternative to prevailing moral development assumptions in early childhood education. Drawing on a Bakhtinian theoretical framework, theories of identity formation, and examples from my longitudinal research study of child-adult play, I reframe development as a lifelong process of coauthoring ethical identities that may begin in early childhood when adults join children in dramatic play.
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • The Challenge of Individuality in Cultural- Historical Activity Theory: “Collectividual” Dialectics from a Transformative Activist Stance.Anna Stetsenko - 2013 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 14 (2):07-28.
    In addressing the persistent challenge of fully integrating individual dimensions and human subjectivity within the cultural-historical activity theory, this paper suggests several steps to revise its core onto-epistemology in an expansive approach termed the transformative activist stance. This approach outlines the subtle dialectics of individual and collective planes of human praxis whereby each individual is shaped by collective history and collaborative practices while at the same time shaping and real-izing them through contributing to their collective, dynamic materiality in moving beyond (...)
    Direct download (6 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Design Bearings.Margaret M. Latta - 2006 - Education and Culture 21 (2):5.
  • Elephant or Elebird?: dialogic formation of truth and subjectivity in Dr. Seuss’s Horton Hatches the Egg & Horton Hears a Who!Mohammad Mehdi Kimiagari - 2017 - International Journal of Children's Spirituality 22.
    The voice of the other seems to become more than just a marginal voice in Dr. Seuss’s Horton stories. Throughout these two narratives the character of this big elephant constantly reinforces the marginal voice of the other through a dialogic relationship. Horton the elephant cannot and will not stand a ruling voice. He persistently searches for the other. He is big and he does big things for small things. His acts of compassion and solicitude can best be explained through Mikhail (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark