I Contain Multitudes 
Terry Eagleton
- Mikhail Bakhtin: The Word in the World by Graham Pechey Buy this book
For the past three decades, Mikhail Bakhtin has been more of an industry than an individual. Not only an industry, in fact, but a flourishing transnational corporation, complete with jet-setting chief executives, global conventions and its own in-house journal. In the field of cultural theory, this victim of Stalinism is now big business. Most of the mouth-filling terms he coined – dialogism, double-voicedness, chronotope, heteroglossia, multi-accentuality – have passed into the lexicon of contemporary criticism. A cosmopolitan coterie of scholars, some of whom have devoted a lifetime to his texts, have long since struggled to appropriate him for their own agendas. Is he a Marxist, neo-Kantian, religious humanist, discourse theorist, literary critic, cultural sociologist, ethical thinker, philosophical anthropologist, or all these things together?
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Terry Eagleton is John Edward Taylor Professor of English Literature at Manchester. His books include Literary Theory, After Theory and, most recently, The Meaning of Life.
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Newsreel History · Modern Times, Modern Places by Peter Conrad
Nudge-Winking · T.S. Eliot’s Politics
Coruscating on Thin Ice · The Divine Spark
Unhoused · anonymity
In the Gaudy Supermarket · Gayatri Spivak
Reach-Me-Down Romantic · For and Against Orwell
Mothering · The Blackwater Lightship by Colm Tóibín