Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2011
This book's premise begins with two simple and related questions. First, why should we study aesthetic constructs, and what kind of knowledge does that study yield; and second, what does the work of Mikhail Bakhtin offer to such a study? The questions can be made more precise: how can aesthetic knowledge be said to have social significance; and, if literary analysis does affect or change human social relations, what is the nature of that change? Bakhtin's project – which he called a “sociological poetics” – is at once an analysis of how social structures are comprised of language, and of how aesthetic objects are uniquely formed social structures, and so is uniquely positioned to intervene in the space delimited by these questions.
Yet at the foundation of Bakhtin's work lies an ambivalence about the way the human subject is constructed. In his earliest work – which bears a close relation to Husserl's phenomenology, Gadamer's hermeneutics, and the aesthetic theory of the neo-Kantian resurgence of the 1910s and 1920s – Bakhtin proposes a human subject that is defined by its relation to other subjects, and the ways in which that relation is manifested in the creation of signs. The “phenomenological” works emphasize the inescapability of language, and suggest analyses of (aesthetic) language based on the complexities of one subject's relation to another. As his work progresses, however, Bakhtin pays more attention to the material conditions of the human subjects whose language is under analysis.
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