Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture: Bakhtin and Beyond

Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture: Bakhtin and Beyond

by Esther Peeren
Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture: Bakhtin and Beyond

Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture: Bakhtin and Beyond

by Esther Peeren

Hardcover

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Overview

Peeren's book brings the work of Russian literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin to bear on contemporary expressions of popular culture, including the novel and television series Sex and the City, the television series Queer as Folk, the films Nell and Flawless, and London's annual Notting Hill Carnival. This selection of artifacts and events is designed to show the continuing relevance of Bakhtin's ideas for present-day literary and cultural studies and to theorize the construction and political assertion of gender, racial, and sexual identities as fundamentally intersubjective. With Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture, Peeren models a new approach to Bakhtin that moves away from the study of Bakhtin's sources and historical context in order to situate him in relation to present-day debates about identity and agency. By working through various concepts—the chronotope, performativity, the look and the gaze, the cultural addressee, accents and speech genres, translation, and territory and versioning—she demonstrates how Bakhtin's ideas are tested, transformed, and extended by their interaction with specific instances of popular culture and with the other theoretical frameworks those instances invoke.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804756693
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 09/17/2007
Series: Cultural Memory in the Present
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Esther Peeren is Lecturer in Comparative and (Trans-)Cultural Analysis in the Department of Languages and Literatures at the University of Amsterdam. She completed her Ph.D. at the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis and has published articles on queer television, the chronotopic dimension of diaspora, and the translation theories of Mikhail Bakhtin and Jean Laplanche. Her current research explores the spectral dimension of gender and race identities in contemporary literature, film, and television.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments     IX
Intersubjectivities and Popular Culture: An Introduction     1
Chronotopic Identities     32
Chronotopic Belonging     53
The Intersubjective Eye: The Look Versus the Gaze     73
The Intersubjective Voice: Dialogism and the Cultural Addressee     99
Resignifications: Accents and Speech Genres     126
Identities in Translation     148
Territories of Identity     172
Versioning Identities     201
Afterword     229
Notes     235
Works Cited     255
Index     271
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