Proposed to be offered next in 2000
Millicent Vladiv-Glover
12 points - 3 hours per week - Clayton - Prohibitions: CLS2830/CLS3830, CRT4830, SLA4830
Objectives On successful completion of the course students should be familiar with the basic phenomenological concepts of the writings of M M Bakhtin and be able to demonstrate, through analysis of his texts or by applying his texts as analytic models, how his theoretical orientation transcends his native (Russian) Formalism and Structuralism (of the Lotman Tartu School) in the direction of modern (post-Kantian) ethics. Students will be expected to reflect widely on the theoretical significance of Bakhtin.
Synopsis The course will move from a simple problem in the form of the question: What is Bakhtin's and Lotman's structuralism like? to a more complex relational question, namely: how does Bakhtin's version of structuralism (in particular his work on the philosophy of the act) relate to ethics and Western critical theory from the 1960s to the 1990s? The new perspective from which the Bakhtin material will be illuminated will thus take the investigation beyond Structuralism.
Assessment One seminar paper (1500 words): 20% - Research essay (4500 words): 50% - Examination (3 hours): 30% - Students may choose to convert the 3-hour examination into an additional essay of 3000 words.
Prescribed texts
Bakhtin M Towards a philosophy of the Act tr.
V Liapunov, ed. V Liapunov and M Holquist,
U Texas P
Kant I Critique of judgement tr. W S Pluhar, Hackett
Lotman Y Analysis of the poetic text tr. D B Johnson, Ardis
Levinas E Totality and Infinity
Recommended texts
Mandelker A (ed.) Bakhtin in context: Across the
disciplines Northwestern U P
Eco U Semiotics and the philosophy of language London
Genette G Narrative discourse tr. J Lewin, Cornell U P
Patterson D Literature and spirit: Bakhtin and his contemporaries
U Kentucky P