This work introduces the concept of the Voice of the Other and the intersubjective world it creates for humans.
About the Author: STANLEY WILLIAM ROTHSTEIN is Professor of Education, in the Graduate Department of Education Administration at California State University, Fullerton.
192 Pages
Language + Art + Disciplines, Language Arts
Description
About the Book
This work introduces the concept of the Voice of the Other and the intersubjective world it creates for humans. The unconscious processes of speech and language are deeply identified with the ego. In the movement from nature to civilization, the newborn is mastered by language and becomes part of the social world of his parents. The child's thought is now structured by parental language and speech as well as by memories stored in the unconscious. What is real for the individual is composed only of the images and words that define them. Even family and school relationships are structured in language and the social formations that language created in the past. The imaginary and symbolic functions of the mind form ideologies that bind people together and help them to make sense of their world. In schools this leads to submissive students and constant teacher-student conflict.
The author uses the works of Freud, Lacan, and Marx to situate schooling in capitalist society. He employs psychoanalytic, linguistic, and anthropological perspectives in an attempt to discover how we think and communicate with one another using unconscious processes.
Book Synopsis
This work introduces the concept of the Voice of the Other and the intersubjective world it creates for humans. The unconscious processes of speech and language are deeply identified with the ego. In the movement from nature to civilization, the newborn is mastered by language and becomes part of the social world of his parents. The child's thought is now structured by parental language and speech as well as by memories stored in the unconscious. What is real for the individual is composed only of the images and words that define them. Even family and school relationships are structured in language and the social formations that language created in the past. The imaginary and symbolic functions of the mind form ideologies that bind people together and help them to make sense of their world. In schools this leads to submissive students and constant teacher-student conflict.
The author uses the works of Freud, Lacan, and Marx to situate schooling in capitalist society. He employs psychoanalytic, linguistic, and anthropological perspectives in an attempt to discover how we think and communicate with one another using unconscious processes.
About the Author
STANLEY WILLIAM ROTHSTEIN is Professor of Education, in the Graduate Department of Education Administration at California State University, Fullerton./e He is the author of Identity and Ideology: Sociocultural Theories of Schooling (Greenwood Press, 1991) and other books. Presently he is editing an academic Handbook of Schooling in Urban America for Greenwood Press and preparing a new book, The Phenomenology of the Imaginary.
Dimensions (Overall): 8.58 Inches (H) x 5.76 Inches (W) x .77 Inches (D)
Weight: .85 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Number of Pages: 192
Genre: Language + Art + Disciplines
Sub-Genre: Language Arts
Publisher: Praeger
Theme: Semantics
Format: Hardcover
Author: Stanley Rothstein
Language: English
Street Date: November 30, 1992
TCIN: 1008776152
UPC: 9780275943585
Item Number (DPCI): 247-07-3456
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
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Shipping details
Estimated ship dimensions: 0.77 inches length x 5.76 inches width x 8.58 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 0.85 pounds
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