... clear that these were not only various different languages but even internally variegated languages, that the ideological systems and approaches to the world that were indissolubly connected with these languages contradicted each other and in no way... Notes on Love in a Tamil Family - Page 267by Margaret Trawick - 2023 - 320 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Stan Mumford - 1989 - 304 pages
...these languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another— then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...actively choosing one's orientation among them began. (Bakhtin 1981:296) The Ghale clan's narrative is told by the shaman as an "exemplary model" (G. pe).... | |
| Dale M. Bauer, Susan Jaret McKinstry - 1991 - 270 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another — then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...actively choosing one's orientation among them began. (/)/, 295 - 6) Walker's The Color Purple could well be plotted by the heroine's growing awareness of... | |
| C. Addison Stone - 1993 - 410 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another—then the inviolability and predetermined quality of these...choosing one's orientation among them began. [1981, pp. 295-96] To bring Bakhtin's conception of these conflict situations to life, we have a few accounts... | |
| Vera John-Steiner, Carolyn P. Panofsky, Larry W. Smith - 1994 - 420 pages
...these languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another - then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...actively choosing one's orientation among them began. Approaches to Deaf education which impose others' solutions, concepts, and truths on the student -... | |
| Dennis Tedlock, Bruce Mannheim - 1995 - 316 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another . . . [when] the inviolability and predetermined quality of these...actively choosing one's orientation among them began" (ibid.: 296).' The present study follows Bakhtin's directive to "examine a peasant." It explores the... | |
| Marcia Moraes - 1996 - 180 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another — then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...actively choosing one's orientation among them began, (p. 296) In other words, the peasant is not conscious that she is inevitably engaged to an ideological... | |
| V. Y. Mudimbe - 1997 - 248 pages
...in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another — then the inviolability and pretermined quality of these languages came to an end, and the...of actively choosing one's orientation among them began.56 What is so fascinating in these diaries is that they testify to the simultaneous coexistence... | |
| Meili Steele - 1997 - 238 pages
...as a critical interanimation of languages began to occur in the consciousness of our peasant . . . then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...these languages came to an end, and the necessity of choosing one's orientation among them began" (p. 296). This Rousseauesque example of the linguistic... | |
| Dorothy J. Hale - 1998 - 264 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another—then the inviolability and predetermined quality of these...actively choosing one's orientation among them began. (296) In other words, the peasant learns to distinguish among the ideological systems to which he belongs... | |
| Michael McKeon - 2000 - 972 pages
...languages contradicted each other and in no way could live in peace and quiet with one another — then the inviolability and predetermined quality of...actively choosing one's orientation among them began. Notes i. See "From the Prehistory of Novelistic Discourse," below. a. Cf. A. Dieterich, Pulcinella:... | |
| |