Vygotsky and the Social Formation of Mind

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 1985 - Psychology - 262 pages

In a book of intellectual breadth, James Wertsch not only offers a synthesis and critique of all Vygotsky’s major ideas, but also presents a program for using Vygotskian theory as a guide to contemporary research in the social sciences and humanities. He draws extensively on all Vygotsky’s works, both in Russian and in English, as well as on his own studies in the Soviet Union with colleagues and students of Vygotsky.

Vygotsky’s writings are an enormously rich source of ideas for those who seek an account of the mind as it relates to the social and physical world. Wertsch explores three central themes that run through Vygotsky’s work: his insistence on using genetic, or developmental, analysis; his claim that higher mental functioning in the individual has social origins; and his beliefs about the role of tools and signs in human social and psychological activity Wertsch demonstrates how the notion of semiotic mediation is essential to understanding Vygotsky’s unique contribution to the study of human consciousness.

In the last four chapters Wertsch extends Vygotsky’s claims in light of recent research in linguistics, semiotics, and literary theory. The focus on semiotic phenomena, especially human language, enables him to integrate findings from the wide variety of disciplines with which Vygotsky was concerned Wertsch shows how Vygotsky’s approach provides a principled way to link the various strands of human science that seem more isolated than ever today.

 

Contents

Vygotsky The Man and His Theory
1
Vygotskys Genetic Method
17
The Social Origins of Higher Mental Functions
58
Vygotskys Semiotic Analysis
77
Extending Vygotskys Semiotic Analysis Propositional and Discourse Referentiality
129
Semiotic Mechanisms in Vygotskys Genetic Law of Cultural Development
158
Units of Psychological Functioning Consciousness Word Meaning and Action
184
Mind and Society
209
Notes
233
Bibliography
239
Name Index
255
Subject Index
259
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 221 - Its basis is that a relation between people takes on the character of a thing and thus acquires a 'phantom objectivity', an autonomy that seems so strictly rational and all-embracing as to conceal every trace of its fundamental nature: the relation between people.
Page 221 - The transformation of the commodity relation into a thing of 'ghostly objectivity' cannot therefore content itself with the reduction of all objects for the gratification of human needs to commodities. It stamps its imprint upon the whole consciousness of man; his qualities and abilities are no longer an organic part of his personality, they are things which he can 'own' or 'dispose of like the various objects of the external world.
Page 17 - To encompass in research the process of a given thing's development in all its phases and changes — from birth to death — fundamentally means to discover its nature. its essence. for "it is only in movement that a body shows what it is.
Page 67 - ... the zone of proximal development defines those functions that have not yet matured but are in the process of maturing, functions that will mature tomorrow but are currently in an embryonic state.
Page 219 - The dominance of a spirit of formalistic impersonality, "Sine ira et studio," without hatred or passion, and hence without affection or enthusiasm. The dominant norms are concepts of straightforward duty without regard to personal considerations.
Page 67 - ... potential development as determined through problem solving under adult guidance or in collaboration with more capable peers
Page 203 - An activity is not an aggregate of reactions, but a system with its own structure, its own internal transformations, and its own development. ... If we removed human activity from the system of social relationships and social life, it would not exist and would have no structure.
Page 227 - What we are calling a hybrid construction is an utterance that belongs, by its grammatical (syntactic) and compositional markers, to a single speaker, but that actually contains mixed within it two utterances, two speech manners, two styles, two 'languages,' two semantic and axiological belief systems.
Page 8 - ... to stop and search his memory for the next idea. Even had the content of his speech been pedestrian, his performance would have been notable for the persuasiveness of his style. But his speech was by no means pedestrian. Instead of choosing a minor theme, as might befit a young man of twenty-eight speaking for the first time to a gathering of the graybeards of his profession, Vygotsky chose the difficult theme of the relation between conditioned reflexes and man's conscious behavior. . . . Although...
Page 60 - Any function in the child's cultural development appears twice, or on two planes. First it appears on the social plane, and then on the psychological plane. First it appears between people as an interpsychological category, and then within the child as an intrapsychological category.

About the author (1985)

James V. Wertsch is Professor and Chair of the Department of Psychology, Clark University.

Bibliographic information