Mikhail Bakhtin
From RhetorClick
Contents |
Biography
Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975) was a Russian literary theorist and philosopher of language. He was born into a noble family in Russia, and his father and grandfather owned and managed state banks. Few of his works were published during his lifetime. Most of his writing focused on Marxism, semiotics, structuralism, and religious criticism.
Article Summaries
Bakhtin, Mikhail "Toward a Methodology for the Human Sciences"
Additional Works/Publications
Books
Author and Hero in Aesthetic Activity (Avtor i geroi v esteticheskoi deiatel´nosti) 1924-7
Problems of Dostoyevsky's Art (Problemy poetiki Dostoevskogo)
Freudianism a Critical Sketch (Freidizm: Kriticheskii ocherk)
Marxism and the Philosophy of Language (Marksizm i filosofia iazyka) 1929
The work of François Rabelais and the Culture of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance (Tvorchestvo Fransua Rable i narodnaia kul´tura srednevekov´ia i renessansa)
Toward a Philosophy of the Act
Articles/Essays
"Art and Answerability" (“Iskusstvo i otvetstvennost´”) 1919
"The Problem of Content, Material and Form in Verbal Artistic Creation" (“Problema soderzheniia i formy v slovesnom khudozhestvennom tvorchestve”) 1924
Further Readings
Other Scholarly Views
Agreement
Those authors that agree with Bakhtin.
Opposition
Those authors that disagree with Bakhtin.
References
- Brandist, Craig. "Bakhtin Circle, The [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]." Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. University of Sheffield, 15 July 2005. Web. 07 May 2011. For website, click here.
- Zappen, James P. "Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975)" Twentieth-Century Rhetoric and Rhetoricians: Critical Studies and Sources. Ed. Michael G. Moran and Michelle Ballif. Westport: Greenwood Press, 2000. 7-20. For the electronic version, click here.