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Nikolai Veresov helps to distinguish cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) and cultural-historical theory (CHT).  (Initially published December 2, 2020)

Highlights include: 

0:35 - What is CHAT? (Ant's confession) 

1:58 - Nikolai's preference for clarification over comparison 

3:39 - Veresov (2020): Two theories with many strengths 

5:51 - Nikolai's appreciation and respect for CHAT 

7:27 - Nikolai's concerns about CHAT 

8:36 - Historical background of CHT, Activity Theory, and CHAT  

15:24 - Why is this important? 

19:17 - Is Nikolai alone here? 

23:18 - Three coexisting theories 

25:55 - Specific features of CHT and of CHAT 

32:20 - Is CHAT more about systems while CHT is about individuals? 

34:45 - Personality, transformation, and metamorphosis (CHAT and CHT) 

38:31 - Is there a metamorphosis dynamic in CHAT? 

40:44 - The concept of contradiction in CHT and in CHAT 

43:41 - An example of dialectical unity (life and birth and death) 

48:52 - Vygotskian application of dialectical unity (not subject-object but individual-social) 

54:12 - Example: development of HPF or cultural forms of behavior?  

59:36 - Mediation in CHAT and in CHT   

1:04:11 - Can tools ever have more agency than individuals?  

1:09:50 - Should perezhivanie make an appearance in CHAT? 

1:16:49 - Is CHAT concerned with cultural or social *development*? 

1:19:28 - Where is Vygotsky in CHAT? 

1:21:32 - Can developmental CHT principles map onto CHAT-esque domains? 

1:25:13 - Nikolai's objection  Veresov (2020) 

"Identity as a sociocultural phenomenon: the dialectics of belonging, being and becoming" is here: http://tiny.cc/pty5tz