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Identity's Moments: The Self in Action and Interaction

Autor Robert Perinbanayagam
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 oct 2012
The work is an examination of the role of language in the constitution of self and in the presentation of identity. Following the path laid out by George Herbert Mead, Kenneth Burke and Mikhail Bakhtin the work presents self, identity and meaning as ongoing accomplishments between human actors who participate in what may be termed the dramas of human relations. Human agents use language as symbolic actions with which they transform themselves and others, as well as places and things, clothing and money etc into meanings with which they conduct their lives.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780739172407
ISBN-10: 0739172409
Pagini: 193
Dimensiuni: 159 x 236 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Preface
Chapter 1: The Drama and the Dialectics of Identity
Chapter 2: The Relations of Identity
Chapter 3: TheScenes and Agencies of Identity
Chapter 4: Interaction and the Drama of Engagement (With E.Doyle McCarthy)
Chapter 5: The Meaning of Uncertainty and the Uncertainty of Meaning
Chapter 6: The Coinage of the Self: Page 211
Chapter 7: The Other in the Game: Interactional Processes in Mead and Wittgenstein

Recenzii

Early chapters make strong claims for language as the key to human communication . . . and Perinbanayagam delineates numerous ways language figures into social life and self. This appears to me as . . . [a] strength . . . of the book.
In his latest book, Identity's Moments: The Self in Action and Interaction, Robert Perinbanayagam outdoes not only himself, but other renowned interactionists, who earlier wrote on the same or similar topics, such as Nelson Foote, Anselm Strauss, and Gregory Stone, producing the best book of his long, productive career. In my opinion, this is a must buy book-one that you will want to bend over the page corners, underline words and sentences, and scribble notes to yourself in the margins.
Robert Peribanayagam's latest volume realizes his full potential as a mature scholar. The text spans the humanities in making sense of the manner that human beings come to terms with action in the world; and it is written with what Ortega y Gasset characterizes as 'courteous clarity.' This commitment to making the subtle idea as transparent as possible expands the potential readership for the book-one no longer needs to be a substantial scholar to come to terms with Peribanyagam's ideas, and the ideas of those he references. Peribanayagam shows that he is not only the best sociological reader of Kenneth Burke to date, but quite possibly (and indeed for this reason) the best reader of Kenneth Burke thus far.