This book makes a radical break with earlier interpretations of Bakhtin's work. Using recent Russian scholarship, Ken Hirschkop explodes many of the myths which have surrounded Bakhtin and his work and lays the ground for a new, more historically acute sense of his achievement. Through a comprehensive reading of Bakhtin's work, Hirschkop demonstrates that his discussion of the philosophy of language, literary history, popularfestive culture, and the phenomenology of everyday life revolved around a lifelong search for a new kind of modern ethical culture. A detailed examination of the major works reveals the careful interweaving of philosophical and historical argument which makes Bakhtin at once so compelling and so frustrating a writer. Hirschkop treats Bakhtin not as a metaphysician or a philosopher for the ages, but as a writer inevitably drawn into the historical conflicts produced by a modernizing and democratizing Europe. As a consequence, Bakhtin becomes a more sober but also more original writer, with a striking contribution to make to the definition of the democratic project.
Ken Hirschkop, University of Manchester) Hirschkop, Ken (Research Fellow in English Literature, Research Fellow in English Literature, Kenneth Hirschkop
C. De Coster, P. Habets, France) De Coster, C. (Universite du Littoral-Cote d'Opale, Belgium) Habets, P. (Universite Catholique de Louvain, C. de Coster, Colette De Coster, Patrick Habets
Ted A. Burton, Illinois 62901 (Northwest Research Institute) Burton, Ted A., Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, A Burton, T
Edited by Bryan W. Van Norden, Vassar College) Van Norden, Edited by Bryan W. (Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Bryan Van Norden, Bryan van Norden