The chapters of this volume explore the intimate relations of society, language and mind: the development of each of these depends on the contribution of the other two. In this sense they are co-genetic: mind has recently been described by the famous neuro-scientist, Susan Greenfield, as 'personalized brain.' The development of human mind depends on what it experiences; for human beings, experience goes beyond sensation: it is made of meaning, and interpretation/meaning, in turn, is construed by the various semiotic modalities, of which language is perhaps the most flexible and most pervasive. But language has itself evolved in the course of attempts to reach an 'other.' By shaping the nature of communication, human relations shape also the nature of language; meanings exchanged in verbal interaction become a major force in shaping forms of consciousness; and our consciousness reveals itself in our cultural practices, our ways of being, doing and saying.
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Language, society and consciousness: transdisciplinary orientations and the tradition of specialization
Section One
Editor’s Introduction: The socio-semiotic mediation of mind
1. Basil Bernstein: an exceptional 1924 – 2000
2. Society, language and the mind: the meta-dialogism of Basil Bernstein's theory
3. Speech genre, semiotic mediation and the development of higher mental functions
4. On the social conditions for semiotic mediation: the genesis of mind in society
5. Semiotic mediation and three exotropic theories: Vygotsky, Halliday and Bernstein
Section Two
Editor’s Introduction: Coding orientations and forms of consciousness
6. Code, register and social dialect
7. Semiotic mediation and mental development in pluralistic societies: some implications for tomorrow’s schooling
8. Ways of meaning, ways of learning: code as an explanatory concept
9. Reading picture reading: a study in ideology and inference
10. The ontogenesis of ideology: an interpretation of mother child talk
Section Three
Editor’s Introduction: Language and society: conflict or co-genesis?
11. The disempowerment game: Bourdieu on language
12. Bourdieu on linguistics and language: a response to my commentators
Glossary