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Psychiatry - General & Miscellaneous, Language, Philosophy of, Russian & Soviet Philosophy
Language for Those Who Have Nothing by Peter Good β€” book cover

Language for Those Who Have Nothing

by Peter Good
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Overview

The aim of Language for those who have Nothing is to think psychiatry through the writings of Mikhail Bakhtin. Using the concepts of Dialogism and Polyphony, the Carnival and the Chronotope, a novel means of navigating the clinical landscape is developed.
Bakhtin offers language as a social phenomenon and one that is fully embodied. Utterances are shown to be alive and enfleshed and their meanings realised in the context of given social dimensions. The organisation of this book corresponds with carnival practices of taking the high down to the low before replenishing its meaning anew. Thus early discussions of official language and the chronotope become exposed to descending levels of analysis and emphasis.
Patients and practitioners are shown to occupy an entirely different spatio-temporal topography. These chronotopes have powerful borders and it is necessary to use the Carnival powers of cunning and deception in order to enter and to leave them. The book provides an overview of practitioners who have attempted such transgression and the author records his own unnerving experience as a pseudopatient. By exploring the context of psychiatry's unofficial voices: its terminology, jokes, parodies, and everyday narratives, the clinical landscape is shown to rely heavily on unofficial dialogues in order to safeguard an official identity.

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Editorials

Booknews

Good, a psychiatrist, states that "My own dialogue with Bakhtin has fundamentally altered the way I see mental illness and the means by which it is managed." He describes his initial attraction to Bakhtin as beginning when he became curious about the particulars of Bakhtin's character that allowed him to survive the Soviet experiment. In this study, Good uses the concepts of dialogism and polyphony, the carnival, and the chronotope to navigate the clinical landscape and to gain insight into the profession and practice of psychiatry, patients' experiences, and his own work and life. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
January 31, 2001
Publisher
New York : Kluwer Academic/Plenum, 2001.
Pages
258
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780306465024

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