In seven essays, this book offers a tour de force through those seven disciplines in the humanities that lately underwent a fundamental transformation. In order to apply “exact” scientific methods, these disciplines turned away from their very subjects— the understanding of the relationship or a dialogue that underlies the phenomena they are supposed to investigate. The revisionist approach in this book, based on Mikhail Bakhtin’s work, traces the search for common and specific grounds of the humanities, beginning with psychologism through hermeneutics and semiotics up to the present state of self-annihilation. As an alternative, the book seeks to define humanities as the examination of relationships, which offers an array of refreshing perspectives on each field discussed.
Table des matières
Introduction
Matthias Freise
Internal Dialogism of Russian Postmodern Literature – Polyphony or Schizophrenia?
Maria Andrianova
Between Socrates and the Stranger: How Dialogic Are Plato’s Dialogues?
Kryštof Boháček
Dialogic Method in Literary History
Matthias Freise
Towards a Dialogical Sociology
Michał Kaczmarczyk
Discourses in the Design of Cultural Artifacts
Klaus Krippendorff
Attachment Patterns in the Bi-personal Field
Reinhard Plassmann
Voices in Image. A Methodological and Theoretical Approach to the Dialogic Image of the Other with the European Image of China as an Example
Xiaojing Wang
List of Contributors
A propos de l’auteur
Matthias Freise is professor of Slavic Literatures and Cultures at Georg-August-Universität, Göttingen, Germany.