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El. knyga: Dialogue in the Digital Age: Why it Matters How We Read and What We Say [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Combining literary criticism and theory with anthropology and cognitive science, this highly relevant book argues that we are fundamentally shaped by dialogue. Patrick Grant looks at the manner in which dialogue informs and connects the personal, political, and religious dimensions of human experience and how literacy is being eroded through many factors, including advances in digital technology.

The book begins by tracing the history of evolved communication skills and looks at ways in which interconnections among tragedy, the limits of language, and the silence of abjection contribute to an adequate understanding of dialogue. Looking at examples such as truth decay in journalism and falling literacy levels in school, alongside literary texts from Malory and Shakespeare, Grant shows how literature and criticism embody the essential values of dialogue. The maintenance of complex reading and interpretive skills is recommended for the recuperation of dialogue and for a better understanding of its fundamental significance in the shaping of our personal and social lives.

Tapping into debates about the value of literature and the humanities, and the challenges posed by digitalization, this book will be of interest and significance to people working in a wide range of subjects, including literary studies, communication studies, digital humanities, social policy, and anthropology.
Foreword xi
Acknowledgment xii
1 Why Dialogue? A Brief Introduction
1(8)
Not-so-free enterprise
1(1)
A climate of the times
2(2)
Embodied mosaic
4(1)
Art as dialogue
5(2)
What dialogue is (for now)
7(2)
2 A Manner Of Speaking
9(23)
Two minutes to midnight
9(3)
The big picture: the stories we tell
12(3)
Evolution: beginning again at the beginning
15(4)
How language got into it
19(5)
Openings: personal, political, religious
24(2)
Recapitulation and the uses of literature
26(6)
3 Being Not Unrecognized
32(19)
The same and the different
32(2)
Imagining the immanence of others
34(3)
Gadamer: prejudgement and disclosure
37(3)
How dialogue imitates art
40(2)
Bakhtin: space, time, and transgression
42(3)
Sir Launcelot misrecognized
45(6)
4 On The Side Of The Sunflowers
51(24)
The boundaries of reason and desire
51(2)
Abject silences
53(4)
Transfiguration and meeting others again
57(1)
Tragedy: nothing left to say
58(4)
King Lear: dialogue on empty
62(5)
Dialogue and "the time that is left"
67(2)
Van Gogh: "sorrowful, yet always rejoicing"
69(6)
5 Aporia And Epiphany
75(15)
Bearings in the bricolage
75(2)
Inhabiting aporia
77(3)
Travels with Plato: sailors and cave-dwellers
80(3)
Art and epiphany
83(2)
Pathways: Richard Rolle and Vincent van Gogh
85(5)
6 In Conclusion: To Be Continued
90(5)
Index 95
Patrick Grant is professor emeritus at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.