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- W4379433793 abstract "REVIEWS 569 the idiomatic interpretation being affected,whereas, if the parts below itare altered, the idiomatic meaning will be lost. Yet 'there are no one-to-one correspondences between semantic and syntactic categories and they are not necessarily predictable' (p. 238), and 'an attempt was made to establish principles, by which the information about the lexical specifications of idioms is related to the syntactic configurations. However, the precise mechanism of [the]mapping of this information onto syntax needs further refinement' (p. 239) ? two honest assessments tantamount to confessions that these tasks may turn out to be beyond the capacity ofTG grammar. In all controversies the author has relied on the judgement of native speakers (p. 40, note 16),although they are not always certain (pp. 50, 82) and do not always agree among themselves (pp. 166, 175, note 13, and 180, note 16).Her treatment is synchronie only. Among errors are: the sentence 'npH BCTpene c ero ?ceHOH OHa Ha^eB&Jia MacKy HeBHHHOCTH' (pp. 47, 49), is given as an example of the two-way mean ing of the past imperfective, but it ismore likely that the past imperfective here merely indicates repetition; 'nycTHTb nbuib b rjia3a' (pp. 52, 54) is 'to create a false impression, to deceive', rather than 'to put on airs'; '6paTb 6bnca 3a pora' (p. 52) is 'to act boldly and decisively', not merely 'promptiy'; there is no difference in the semelfactive meanings of the verbs npbirHyTb and TopM03HVTb despite what is said on p. 58; and OTKHHyTb (p. 148) is not a semelfactive at all but a standard perfective. Although the author is righdy cautious in the claims which shemakes for her work, in the course of it she has brought to lightmuch that is of great interest and value. ImperialCollegeLondon C. L. Drage Seifrid, Thomas. The WordMade Self:Russian Writings onLanguage 1860-1g^o. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY and London, 2005. ix + 240 pp. Notes. Selected bibliography. Index. $45.00: ?24.50. This interesting study could have been entitied 'The Intellectual Heritage of Aleksandr Potebnia', since it concentrates on the way inwhich Potebnia's neo-Humboldtian ideas about language and thought were received and reworked by Russian thinkerswith philosophical inclinations in the period before the finalvictory ofMarrism in 1930.The author argues that Potebnia adapted V?lkerpsychologie in such a way that a bridge to certain neo-Platonic principles associated with Russian Orthodox thought was constructed. This proved an attractive stimulus for writers with a variety of agendas, ranging from Symbolists (specifically, Belyi), religious philosophers (Ern, Florenskii, Bulgakov) and early Russian phenomenologists (Shpet, Losev). Some brief comments on theRussian Formalists, Vygotskii and the Bakhtin Circle also serve to present a more complete picture. The unifying feature is that in each case language isheld to constitute the locus of selfhood. One of the difficulties in dealing with thisbody ofwork is thatmuch of it involves a combination of philosophical insight and mystical obfuscation 570 SEER, 85, 3, JULY 2OO7 and does so in the form of philological research. Seifrid does well to negotiate this challenging terrain, showing the way in which (generally) German philosophical ideas were received and interpreted according to trends of thought thatwere already engrained inRussian intellectual life.Some signifi cant German and Austrian sources are not considered, however, and a more general discussion of the impact on phenomenology inRussia would have helped the reader to place theworks of Shpet and Losev within a tradition of thought. One period of Husserl's work is here invoked almost in isolation, while thewider intellectual field fromwhich thiswork emerged was actually well known in Russia. For instance, no mention ismade of the debates between Wundt, Husserl and Anton Marty over the significance of the expressive, representative, and triggering functions of language. These were fundamental in shaping the theories of language that emerged and were the foci of debate at the State Academy forArtistic Studies (GAKhN) where Shpet and Losev were based. Similarly, linkingVygotskii's and Voloshinov's discussions of 'inner speech' directly to Potebnia without considering the influence ofKurt Goldstein, whose work is a confirmed source ofVygotskii's and probable source of Voloshinov's theories fails to engage with crucial determinants and presents a simplified picture. In..." @default.
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- W4379433793 date "2007-07-01" @default.
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- W4379433793 title "The Word Made Self: Russian Writings on Language 1860-1930 by Thomas Seifrid (review)" @default.
- W4379433793 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/see.2007.0079" @default.
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