附註:Includes bibliographical references (pages 461-490) and indexes.
Introduction: Towards a Metacritique of Pure Reflection -- 1. Rhetorics of Representation -- 2. The Epoch of Representation -- 3. Generic Reflection -- 4. Consciousness and Life-World -- 5. Reflection as Speculative Thought -- 6. The Reflexive Self -- 7. Being-in-the-World as Incarnate Reflexivity -- 8. Praxical Reflexivity -- 9. Phronetic Reflexivity: Between Morality and Praxis -- 10. Genealogical Self-Reflexivity -- 11. Transactional Reflexivity -- 12. Dialogical Reflexivity.
摘要:This ground-breaking work, the first in a series of volumes, explores the genealogical analysis of the discourses of reflection. Barry Sandywell traces the differences between the traditional discourses of reflection and the experiences of reflexivity in everyday, social and philosophical thought. The central contention of Sandywell's argument is that in order to begin to address these types of questions we must first explore the force field between the discourses of reflection and reflexivity. To do so requires radical self-investigations of the role of reflexivity in human experience, and more especially of the role of the languages, practices, and institutions of self-reflection within the fabric of Western culture. Consequently, these 'logological investigations' introduce a method of analysis which traces the epochal movement of thought from a videological to a dialogical conception of the world. In doing so they introduce some of the preliminary work necessary for more detailed studies of premodern, modern, and postmodern forms of reflexivity in the subsequent volumes. Brilliantly organized and abounding with astonishing insights, Volume 1 offers a fundamental challenge to our normal ways of viewing social thought.