Contents: J.V. Wertsch, Foreword. Preface. J.E. Knox, Translator's Introduction. Authors' Introduction. Part I:Behavior of the Anthropoid Apes. Three Stages in the Development of Behavior. Kohler's Experiments. The Law of Structure and Ape Behavior. Intellect and the Natural Experience of Apes. Intellect as the Third Stage in the Development of Behavior. Use of the Tool as a Psychological Prerequisite for Labor. Part II:Primitive and His Behavior. Three Lines of Psychological Behavior. Three Theories of Cultural Historical Development. Primitive Man as a Biological Type. Memory in Primitive Man. Thinking in Connection with the Development of Language in Primitive Society. Numeric Operations and Primitive Man. Primitive Behavior. Part III:The Child and Its Behavior. Approaches to the Psychology of an Adult. Adult and Child: The Principle of Metamorphosis. The Infant and His World. Primitive Perception. Primitive Thinking. Steps to Culture. Acquisition of Tools. Cultural Development of Special Functions: Memory. Cultural Development of Special Functions: Attention. Cultural Development of Special Functions: Abstraction. Cultural Development of Special Functions: Speech and Thinking. The Stage of Cultural Development of a Child. Defectology and Psychology. Retardation and Giftedness. Evaluation of Giftedness and the Problems of Cultural Development.
Vygotsky, L.S.; Luria, A.R.; Knox, Jane E.
"...an exemplary case of a scholarly translation-cum-commentary.
The translators not only painstakingly rendered all original
references, but also added valuable notes orienting the reader in
the terms used by Vygotsky and Luria and illuminating the sources
of their theoretical inspiration and empirical data. The match of
translators is perfect -- Golod is a Russian psychologist fluent in
English, and Knox is an American linguist fluent in Russian....of
great interest to everyone concerned with the foundations of
cultural-historical psychology and of great help to future students
of Vygotsky's and Luria's ideas."
—Human Development"Any library serving undergraduate and graduate
students should have this volume of previously untranslated essays
by these Soviet psychologists, which will interest developmental
psychologists, anthropologists, educators, neurologists, and
linguists."
—CHOICE"...this is probably the best single source for
psychologists seeking an English language introduction to
Vygotsky's views....it is by far the most systematic and coherent
presentation of cultural-historical theory yet to appear in
English....Anyone with an interest in psychology as it was during
the late 1920s or in Vygotsky's own intellectual development should
read this book."
—Contemporary Psychology"This book will be of great interest to
everyone concerned with the foundations of cultural-historical
psychology and particulary helpful to future students of the
Vygotsky-Luria theory."
—Theory & Psychology"It contains a wealth of ideas...stimulates
definitely theorizing about development....represents an
achievement that many present-day publications will not reach."
—Ethology"To his contemporaries, Vygotsky was 'a visitor from the
future'--a prophetic assessment, for only now are his early works
finally being translated and republished, and his seminal
importance to a dozen different disciplines appreciated. Though
written more than sixty years ago, this book is strangely, even
intensely, pertinent today--to anthropologists, cultural
psychologists, educational psychologists and teachers, cognitive
psychologists, neuropsychologists, and psychoanalysts and
neurobiologists, who may find here some of the most cogent evidence
ever assembled for how our minds develop in individual ways.
There is no scholar more versed in the original Vygotsky-Luria
work, or its contemporary resonances, than Dr. Jane Knox, who now,
with the late Dr. Victor Golod, has provided us with a brilliant
and scholarly translation of the [book], which she has enriched
with a richly detailed introduction and fascinating footnotes. The
Studies speak to us in a peculiarly contemporary and personal
voice--we seem to hear Vygotsky and Luria in every sentence--and
this is beautifully conveyed in the present
translation.""...although some of the specifics of the claims of
Vygotsky and Luria about culture may be outdated, this does not
call into question the basic genetic approach that they were
seeking to outline. We still have not come to grips with how one
accounts for the complex structural properties of cultures and
languages on the one hand and genetic transitions on the other....a
critical text for understanding these and a host of other issues.
By making such a work by two of the 20th century's greatest
psychologists available to readers of English, the translators and
editors have made a major contribution.
Furthermore, it should be noted that this is no ordinary
translation. The knowledge of languages and the material that Golod
and Knox brought to bear in completing their work make this book
one of the best translations we have of Vygotsky's or Luria's
writings. This is more than an accurate translation, it is an
elegant one that retains much of the feel of the authors' own
styles. Furthermore, thanks to their energetic and ingenious
bibliographic sleuthing, Golod and Knox have provided us with
insights into the sources of the authors' ideas that come to light
here for the first time....This undertaking has resulted in an
accurate, complete, and elegant translation of a very important
work in psychology and its related fields."
—From the Foreword by James V. Wertsch,
Clark University Author of Voices of the Mind: A Sociocultural
Approach to Media
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