
The pioneering and hugely influential work of Mikhail Bakhtin has led scholars in recent decades to see all discourse and social life as inherently "dialogical." No speaker speaks alone, because our words are always partly shaped by our interactions with others, past and future. Moreover, we never fashion ourselves entirely by ourselves, but always do so in concert with others. Bakhtin thus decisively reshaped modern understandings of language and subjectivity. And yet, the contributors to this volume argue that something is potentially overlooked with too close a focus on dialogism: many speakers, especially in charged political and religious contexts, work energetically at crafting monologues, single-voiced statements to which the only expected response is agreement or faithful replication. Drawing on ethnographic case studies from the United States, Iran, Cuba, Indonesia, Algeria, and Papua New Guinea, the authors argue that a focus on "the monologic imagination" gives us new insights into languages' political design and religious force, and deepens our understandings of the necessary interplay between monological and dialogical tendencies.
This volume investigates the overlooked role of monologic discourse in social and political life, challenging the prevailing academic focus on dialogism. Editors Julian Millie and Matt Tomlinson, alongside a group of contributors, examine how speakers in various cultural contexts actively construct single-voiced statements designed to demand consensus or replication rather than interaction. The text argues that understanding these monologic efforts is necessary to fully grasp the political and religious power of language.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in linguistic anthropology view this work as a necessary corrective to the dominance of dialogical frameworks in discourse analysis. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for researchers and advanced students of language and social theory.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2017-06-08
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190652802
ISBN-13:
9780190652807
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