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El. knyga: Rethinking Politeness with Henri Bergson

Edited by (Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles)

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In 1885, Henri Bergson addressed a class of French high school students on the subject of politeness. Bergson would go on to become one of the most influential philosophers of his time, yet although this essay set forth a striking theory of politeness and foreshadowed aspects of his later
work, it remains remarkably little-known. Rethinking Politeness with Henri Bergson offers the first English translation of Discours sur la Politesse, and brings together leading linguistic anthropologists to critically engage with and expand on Bergson's ideas.

At the core of Bergson's essay is a tripartite classification of politeness acts into politesse des manières ("politeness of manners"), politesse de l'esprit ("politeness of mind/spirit"), and politesse du coeur ("politeness of the heart"). Presented along a hierarchy of intersubjective attunement
and ethical aspirations, Bergson's three types call for the progressive abandonment of habits when they get in the way of our ability to help others. They can also be read as an invitation to consider politeness as a dimension of human sociability that is relevant to social theory. Collectively, the
essays in this volume untangle the ideological, socio-historical, and material conditions that shape notions of the ideal social agent, and propose a rethinking of politeness that serves as a bridge to larger issues of civility, citizenship, and democracy.

Recenzijos

In the collective reflection initiated by Alessandro Duranti, Bergson's Discours sur la politesse, which was intended to edify high school students, becomes a profound and superb meditation, at the border between anthropology and linguistics, on the cultural, moral and political aspects of politeness - as it is and could be. * Didier Fassin, author of Life: A Critical User's Manual *

Acknowledgments vii
Contributors ix
Introduction 1(14)
Alessandro Duranti
Politeness 15(10)
Henri Bergson
1 A Sympathetic Reading of Bergson's "Politeness"
25(18)
Alessandro Duranti
2 Politeness Is Political
43(12)
Mahalia Gayle
3 "Politesse," Power, and Point of View: Bergson's Essay in Comparative Perspective
55(10)
Judith T. Irvine
4 "Politeness Has a Heart": From Mantras to Stance-Taking in French Children's Socialization to Politeness
65(18)
Aliyah Morgenstern
5 "Hey, but That's Not Respectful!": Civil Discourse and Liberal Education in Pluralistic France
83(14)
Graham M. Jones
6 Giving Up on Politeness: The Desire for Tactile Knowledge and the Art of Finding Life Lovable
97(12)
Terra Edwards
7 The Surface of Politesse: Acting murtah in Dhofar, Oman
109(12)
Kamala Russell
8 Programming Politeness: Digital Servantry and the Rules of Social Engagement
121(20)
Keith M. Murphy
9 Grace, Too: Reflections on Bergson's Ethics
141(14)
Jason Throop
10 Bergson's Intuitive Politeness
155(20)
William F. Hanks
Index 175
Alessandro Duranti is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at UCLA. His books include From Grammar to Politics: Linguistic Anthropology in a Western Samoan Village (1994), the textbook Linguistic Anthropology (1997), The Anthropology of Intentions: Language in a World of Others (2015), and a number of edited volumes. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, the UCLA Alumni Distinguished Teaching Award, and the American Anthropological Association/Mayfield Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching.