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Author Barsky, Robert F.

Title Zellig Harris : from American linguistics to socialist Zionism / Robert F. Barsky.

Imprint Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c2011.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  401 H248Bb 2011    ---  Available
Description xvii, 353 p. ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Origins -- Avukah -- Frame of reference -- From Semitics to structuralism -- Structural linguistics -- Science, math, and the study of language -- From Avukah to Zionism -- Toward a new society -- From Arab-Jewish cooperation to worker self-management.
Summary In 1995, Robert Barsky met with Noam Chomsky to discuss his work in-progress, Noam Chomsky: A Life of Dissent (MIT Press, 1997). Chomsky told Barsky that he should focus his attention instead on midcentury linguist and activist Zellig Harris, who was, Chomsky modestly insisted, more interesting than Chomsky himself. Intrigued, Barsky began to research Harris (1909-1992) and discovered the story of a major figure in American intellectual life "sitting in a corner in the middle of the room"--part of crucial twentieth-century conversations about language, technology, labor, politics, and Zionism. The intersecting worlds of Harris's intellectual and political activities were populated by such figures as Louis Brandeis, Albert Einstein, Franz Boas, Nathan Glazer, and Chomsky. Barsky describes Harris's work in language studies and his pioneering ideas about discourse analysis, structural linguistics, and information representation. He also discusses Harris's part in the pre-1948 Zionist movement--when many Jews on the Left envisioned a socialist Palestine that would be a haven not only for persecuted Jews but also for disenfranchised Arabs and anyone seeking a sanctuary against oppression--and recounts Harris's debates on the subject with Louis Brandeis, Einstein, and a large group of students involved with a Zionist organization called Avukah. And Barsky describes Harris's views on capitalism, worker-owner relations, and worker self-management, the legacy of which can be found in some of his students' writings, notably those of Seymour Melman, Barsky shows how Harris, as mentor, teacher, and colleague, powerfully influenced figures who came to dominate the twentieth century's political discussion--thinkers as different as Noam Chomsky and Nathan Glazer.
Subject Harris, Zellig S. (Zellig Sabbettai), 1909-1992.
Linguistics.
Language and languages -- Political aspects.
ISBN 9780262015264 (hbk. : alk. paper)
0262015269 (hbk. : alk. paper)

 
    
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