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The First Hundred Years of Mikhail Bakhtin

Caryl Emerson

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Belletristik / Essays, Feuilleton, Literaturkritik, Interviews

Beschreibung

Among Western critics, Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975) needs no introduction. His name has been invoked in literary and cultural studies across the ideological spectrum, from old-fashioned humanist to structuralist to postmodernist. In this candid assessment of his place in Russian and Western thought, Caryl Emerson brings to light what might be unfamiliar to the non-Russian reader: Bakhtin's foundational ideas, forged in the early revolutionary years, yet hardly altered in his lifetime. With the collapse of the Soviet system, a truer sense of Bakhtin's contribution may now be judged in the context of its origins and its contemporary Russian "reclamation."


A foremost Bakhtin authority, Caryl Emerson mines extensive Russian sources to explore Bakhtin's reception in Russia, from his earliest publication in 1929 until his death, and his posthumous rediscovery. After a reception-history of Bakhtin's published work, she examines the role of his ideas in the post-Stalinist revival of the Russian literary profession, concentrating on the most provocative rethinkings of three major concepts in his world: dialogue and polyphony; carnival; and "outsideness," a position Bakhtin considered essential to both ethics and aesthetics. Finally, she speculates on the future of Bakhtin's method, which was much more than a tool of criticism: it will "tell you how to teach, write, live, talk, think."

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Schlagwörter

Hermann Cohen, Pyotr Lavrov, Davydov, Paul Natorp, Adult, Sancho Panza, Open Russia, Oprichnina, Henri Bergson, Postmodernism, Charles Baudelaire, Frantz Fanon, The Postmodern Condition, Novy Mir, Andrei Sinyavsky, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Sobornost, Viktor Shklovsky, Post-structuralism, Lev Vygotsky, The Village of Stepanchikovo, Lenin Prize, Yuri Lotman, Søren Kierkegaard, Anton Chekhov, Vladimir Nabokov, Anatoly Lunacharsky, Berdyaev, Pasternak, Epigram, The Brothers Karamazov, David Remnick, Northrop Frye, Hegelianism, Aesopian language, Mikhail Bakhtin, The Grand Inquisitor, Posthumanism, Wilhelm Reich, Andrei Bely, Aleksei Losev, François Rabelais, Leo Tolstoy, Memoir, Silver age, Boris Godunov, Karl Jaspers, Russian Futurism, Copernican Revolution (metaphor), Confucius, Fusion of horizons, Robert Musil, Wilhelm Dilthey, Franz Kafka, Fredric Jameson, Prince Myshkin, Vladimir Solovyov (journalist), Maxim Gorky, Russian Empire, Russian culture, Mikhail Epstein, Heteroglossia, Boris Groys, Russian studies, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Goncharov, Russian symbolism, Vladimir Propp, Jacques Derrida, Rabelais and His World