Dear Eric,
Thank you for good words about our article!
Below are some answers to the questions you asked - see my comments
within your text:
__________________________
Dr. Ana Marjanovic-Shane
ana@zmajcenter.org
267-334-2905
On Jul 16, 2008, at 10:43 AM, ERIC.RAMBERG@spps.org wrote:
>
> Ana & Ljubica:
>
> Such a well written and presented article, great quotes and examples
> to
> illustrate your thinking. It is always a joy to read something that I
> viewed over time in discussions that appeared on this forum!
> Hopefully
> others will join in the discussion of this great article.
>
> Briefly, here are a couple of thoughts
>
> 1)Having never read Bahktin ( iknow, i know. . .he is so often
> referenced
> that it is simply horrible on my part that I have not) I had never
> come
> across the concept of a chronotope. Now that I have been introduced
> to the
> concept I really like it! And I should add i am now motivated to read
> Bahktin. The use of it to describe a play frame is remarkably
> similar to
> Mikhail Basov's view on the importance of play in a child's
> development.
> This can be referenced in: Basov, M.Ia. (1929) 'Structural
> analysis in
> psychology from the standpoint of behavior'. Journal of Genetic
> Psychology, 36, 267-90. Basov speaks of the child moving from loosely
> organized temporal events to incorporating 'schemes' into goal-
> directedness
> and planning. Is this how chronotope is being used?
ANA: I did not read Basov, but Bakhtin does not use the term
"chronotope" to describe any particular developmental process. It
refers to a unity of time and space and specific values
(valorizations). It is a useful notion to complement shat has been
know as a "frame" or more specifically a "play frame". While play
frame refers more to the boundary and boundary construction -- we
thought that we also needed to introduce a sense what the particular
importance of the internal relationships within a specific frame --
hence, "chronotope"
>
>
> 2)Cognitive development in a child occurs as they experience a
> methaphor in
> a playframe and as a child becomes familiar with the use of this
> metaphor
> they see examples in their daily activities and when they enter into
> another playframe they have a 'ready-made' TOPIC that can easily be
> played
> with?
ANA: One of the goals we have in our research is to look at
development in a holistic manner: not separating cognitive aspects
from emotional and volitional. Thus, we think that creating metaphors
(and possibly meanings in general) is based on coordination of several
relationships -- where relationships have not only cognitive aspects
but also affective, ideological and volitional ones.
Metaphors, as we see them, furthermore require a specific coordination
between play frames and and reality frames. Therefore, creating a play
frame is not enough for development of metaphor -- a new way of seeing
and organizing reality happens when the play chronotope can be used as
a comment "for real" - i.e. to reorganize the actual, real, serious,
ways of seeing, feeling and relating to life events. This change is
not merely cognitive, it is a full lived through experience
(perezhivanye) -- involving emotions, hopes, decisions, relations to
others etc...
>
>
> 3) One last thought pertains to the examples of how a TOPIC is
> presented
> in the playframe. "Pretend there is a monster coming" ; "Let's
> pretend you
> are my father and I am your daughter." In both instances it is the
> word
> that comes first and not the behavior. Perhaps is this why Vygotsky
> viewed
> the word as the unit of analysis for the study of human development?
ANA: In our examples "Pretend" was a word to signal a change of frame
(chronotope). But the same effect can be achieved through different
means: a wink, an exaggerated imitation, involvement of "impossible"
elements in a story, etc... What is important is that the participants
all agree that what they are doing is within a play-frame. If such
agreement does not exist, that can lead to different consequences
(deliberate lies, misunderstandings, disorientation etc) -- which were
out of the scope of this paper.
We also did not discuss Vygotsky's notion of the word as a unit of
analysis is this paper. However, our unit of analysis differs from
Vygotsky's. We were looking for a unit of analysis at the level of the
construction of meaning -- and not at a syntactic level to which
"word" actually belongs as an analytic unit. This can be seen even on
a purely cognitive plane: if one can place an equation sign between a
word and its definition (given in a sentence or two), then it is clear
that meaning cannot be reduced to purely linguistic level, but is
something of a different quality.
I also don't think that Vygotsky viewed the word as a unit of analysis
for the study of human development, but for a much more specific
aspect of development -- conceptual development.
In our study we tried to look at the development of views and
understandings of the world through different units and their
combinations, however, we attempted to give the development a more
dynamic character and to see it as part of the ongoing social
processes and activities.
>
>
> Again, such a great article and thanks for sharing it with XMCA!
>
> What do others think?
>
> eric
>
>
ANA: I hope I answered your questions, at least in part.
Ana
> _______________________________________________
> xmca mailing list
> xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
> http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
>
_______________________________________________
xmca mailing list
xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
http://dss.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/xmca
Received on Wed Jul 16 13:17 PDT 2008
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri Aug 01 2008 - 00:30:08 PDT