A Few Chaotic Class Notes
On Vygotsky, Orwell, Gladwell
& Love
3/4/08
Love is an interesting concept to explore because it is at once quite abstract and, at the same time, very real—it’s a concept people care “passionately” about
It is also a concept very much built upon linguistic notions—if we trace ideas of love backward in time, we can find roots of “romantic” love in literature and, of course, cultural conceptions about love can be quite distinct
Time has changed the concept of love for us
We also rarely discuss our understandings of love, so they are very much rooted in our internal thinking/inner speech
Silence is golden
No more intercultural relating
If we are going to talk about this topic, we need liquor
Love is biological—nor epinephrine—can’t be controlled; your body is effecting your sense of love
OR is love a mental state
What sort of love are we talking about?
Define love, then construct a meaning based on that definition—social cultural construct
What about cross cultural experiences
People can grow into love over time
Vygotsky p. 249—“Inner speech is to a large extent thinking in pure meanings. It is a dynamic, shifting, unstable thing, fluttering between word and thought…”
You say I love you when you mean it.
The linking of the biological and the linguistic
Use metaphors, proverbs to explain the abstract concept
Religion—love your brother
Religion as a justification for war
Holy War
Manufacture concepts by appropriating language
Consciousness is reconstructed through language
- Could we have love without the word “love”?
- Once we give the concept a term/name, can we understand the concept without it?
- Can you talk about the concept “love” without using the term
- Can you think about love without thinking about the term “love”
- “a rose by any other name is still a rose”--Shakespeare
What are we allowed to talk about in education?
Orwell—“the whole aim of Newspeak is to narrow the range of thought” (p. 46)
Society vs. individual cognition—we’re always bound by context (Vygotsky says that inner speech always develops from external speech)
Zero
We are always adding connotations through language
Usage of “love” is constrained by social pressure
Overuse “muddies the water” or dulls the concept—makes it unclear
But actions are just as constrained in some ways as words—hugging or kissing
How do we teach a child what love is?
- Stories
- Tell narratives to represent the concept
Children don’t have the vocabulary to express what love is?
Children have what we normally call unconditional love
But they seem to have a solid grasp of love.
Does the language reshape their concept of love.
But what is love after all?
- Is it a social construct?
- Is it innate?
- Is it athabascom (native American Indians of Northern Canada)
- Nature vs. nurture
Redefine words