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Dialogism: Bakhtin and His World
Michael Holquist
- 01 Jan 1990
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TL;DR: For instance, the authors argues that while work from different periods in Bakhtin's life is highly varied, there is a discernible shape to his achievement as a whole, and it is this commitment to the concept of dialogue that provides coherence in his contributions to a wide variety of disciplines.
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Abstract: Mikhail Bakhtin's ideas - on the dialogic nature of language, the carnivalesque, the nature of the novel, outsideness and answerability - have gained currency in literary studies, anthropology, linguistics, psychology and social theory. Each discipline offers its own version of Bakhtin's legacy, but none, Michael Holquist suggests, can serve as an adequate basis for understanding the overall significance of Bakhtin's writings. Dialogism will provide this basis: Michael Holquist draws on all of Bakhtin's writings known to exist, including Soviet archive material, to provide a comprehensive account of his whole oeuvre. Holquist argues that while work from different periods in Bakhtin's life is highly varied, there is a discernible shape to his achievement as a whole. The key to Bakhtin's distinctiveness is, Holquist suggests, his commitment to the concept of dialogue, and it is this commitment which provides coherence in the contributions Bakhtin makes to a wide variety of disciplines. Dialogism examines Bakhtin's dialogue with other thinkers - for example, Saussure, Freud, Marx and Lukacs, as well as other figures in the history of thinking about dialogue whose connectio with Bakhtin's work have previously been ignored.
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