Beyond discourse : education, the self, and dialogue

書誌事項

Beyond discourse : education, the self, and dialogue

Alexander M. Sidorkin

State University of New York Press, c1999

  • : hc.
  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 155-159) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Using Mikhail Bakhtin's concepts of dialogue and carnival, and in connection with the ideas of Martin Buber, Sidorkin explores the issues of difference and identity in a very postmodern view of the self. He addresses the questions of what it really means to be human, and, likewise, what truly makes a good school. He takes dialogue beyond the framework of discourse, making it an end in itself rather than a means toward better education. His sojourn into a fifth-grade classroom shows that basic forms of classroom talk, which are normally thought to be distracting or educationally useless, are proved to be valuable dialogical moments of discovery in schooling.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction Framing the Problem Method Chapter 1 Dialogue and Human Existence Preliminary Remarks Thou Art, Therefore, I Am: The Nature of Discovery Laws of the Dialogical Bakhtin and Gadamer Language of Monologism Multi-Monologues of the Postmodern Chapter 2 Homo Dialogicus The Polyphonic Self Dialogical Morality On Wholeness and Spontaneity Integrity, Identity, Authenticity Chapter 3 The Three Drinks Theory: Types of Discourse in Classroom Communication Theory Background Research, Results and Discussion First Discourse Second Discourse Third Discourse The Cycle of Three Discourses Chapter 4 Dialogical Schools: Complexity, Civility, Carnival The Good School Original Relational Incident Complexity Civility Carnival An Inconclusive Conclusion Notes References Index >

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