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  1. Alterity and Ethics.Michael Gardiner - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (2):121-143.
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  • Will and communality in Bakhtin, from a Nietzschean perspective.Christiaan Beyers - 2015 - Studies in East European Thought 67 (3):145-164.
    The article engages Bakhtin’s corpus with Nietzschean ideas in order to draw out critical resources for the social theory of ‘community’. It begins by considering both thinkers’ debt to neo-Kantianism, and proceeds to relate the ‘will to power’ to Bakhtin’s early intersubjective phenomenology of intentional acts. This interpretation is then extended to Bakhtin’s conception of art, where aesthetics stands in tensile relation to ethics in the exercise of authorial will. Bakhtin’s later work might be seen as elaborating more complex terms (...)
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  • Chronotopes.Joost van Loon - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (2):89-104.
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  • The Stylistics of Competent Speaking.John Michael Roberts - 2004 - Theory, Culture and Society 21 (6):91-114.
    It has been noted that certain similarities can be detected between the work of the Bakhtin Circle and the work of Jürgen Habermas. While I do not deny that these sorts of similarities can be detected, I also argue that the insights of the Bakhtin Circle can be used to provide the basis of a critique of Habermas. My specific aim is to show how Habermas perpetuates a ‘stylistic’ approach to discourse theory. ‘Stylistics’, as conceived by the Bakhtin Circle, explores (...)
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  • Critical discourse studies: where to from here?Bernard McKenna - 2004 - Critical Discourse Studies 1 (1):9-39.
    This paper surveys critical discourse studies to the present and claims that, to avoid lapsing into comfortable orthodoxy in its mature phase, CDS needs to reassert its transformative radical teleology. The initial part of the paper reasserts the need for a strong social theory given the materialist and context-bound nature of discourse in daily activity. From this basis, the paper then characterizes the “new times” in which contemporary discourse occurs, and briefly surveys those issues typically analyzed, namely political economy, race (...)
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  • Discursive psychology and the “new racism”.Kevin McKenzie - 2003 - Human Studies 26 (4):461-491.
    This paper addresses a range of theoretical issues which are the topic of recent social psychological and related research concerned with the “new racism.” We critically examine examples of such research in order to explore how analyst concerns with anti-racist political activism are surreptitiously privileged in explanations of social interaction, often at the expense of and in preference to the work of examining participants' own formulations of those same activities. Such work is contrasted with an ethnomethodologically-informed, discursive psychology which seeks (...)
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  • “The Wordless Nothing”: Narratives of Trauma and Extremity. [REVIEW]M. J. Larrabee, S. Weine & P. Woolcott - 2003 - Human Studies 26 (3):353 - 382.
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  • The shifting concept of the self.Ian Burkitt - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (2):7-28.
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  • The Official and the Popular in Gramsci and Bakhtin.Craig Brandist - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (2):59-74.
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  • Dialogic Ruptures: An Ethical Imperative.Sonja Arndt - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 49 (9):909-921.
    Dialogue is promoted as a key strategy to ‘solve’ the ‘problem’ of diversity in educational settings. Yet, “[w]hen we select words … We usually take them from other utterances, and mainly from utterances that are kindred to ours in genre, that is in theme, composition or style”. This article problematises the complexities of dialogic engagements with foreigner teachers in educational encounters. Bakhtin’s treatment of polyphonic dialogic encounters provides an analytical frame for explicating the intertextuality of foreigner teacher engagements as not (...)
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