
Dialogue and Critical Discourse : Language, Culture, Critical Theory.
Title:
Dialogue and Critical Discourse : Language, Culture, Critical Theory.
Author:
Macovski, Michael.
ISBN:
9780195361322
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (285 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Contributors -- Introduction: Textual Voices, Vocative Texts: Dialogue, Linguistics, and Critical Discourse -- Part I: DIALOGUE WITHIN WORKS -- 1 Narrative Transmission: Shifting Gears in Shelley's "Ozymandias" -- 2 The Power of Speech: Dialogue as History in the Russian Primary Chronicle -- 3 Crossroads to Community: Jude the Obscure and the Chronotype of Wessex -- 4 Dialogue in Lyric Narrative -- Part II: DIALOGUE BETWEEN WORKS -- 5 Dialogics of the Lyric: A Symposium on Wordsworth's "Westminster Bridge" and "Beauteous Evening" -- 6 Involvement as Dialogue: Linguistic Theory and the Relation between Conversational and Literary Discourse -- 7 "The Bard I Quote From": Byron, Bakhtin, and the Appropriation of Voices -- 8 Marxism, Romanticism, and Postmodernism: An American Case History -- Part III: DIALOGUE BETWEEN SPEAKERS, READERS, AND AUTHORS -- 9 The Essay in English: Readers and Writers in Dialogue -- 10 Bakhtin and Beautiful Science: The Paradox of Cultural Relativity Revisited -- 11 Conversation as Dialogue -- 12 Extracts from a Heteroglossary.
Abstract:
This interdisciplinary volume of collected, mostly unpublished essays demonstrates how Mikhail Bakhtin's theory of dialogic meaning--and its subsequent elaborations--have influenced a wide range of critical discourses. With essays by Michael Holquist, Jerome J. McGann, John Searle, DeborahTannen, Gary Saul Morson, Caryl Emerson, Shirley Brice Heath, Don H. Bialostosky, Paul Friedrich, Timothy Austin, John Farrell, Rachel May, and Michael Macovski, the collection explores dialogue not only as an exchange among intratextual voices, but as an extratextual interplay of historicalinfluences, oral forms, and cultural heuristics as well. Such approaches extend the implications of dialogue beyond the boundaries of literary theory, to anthropology, philosophy, linguistics, and cultural studies. The essays address such issues as the establishment and exercise of political power,the relation between conversational and literary discourse, the historical development of the essay, and the idea of literature as social action. Taken together, the essays argue for a redefinition of literary meaning--one that is communal, interactive, and vocatively created. They demonstrate thatliterary meaning is not rendered by a single narrator, nor even by a solitary author--but is incrementally exchanged and constructed.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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