Structuralism Essay2
Structuralism Essay2
Structuralism Essay2
explaining how each of this entities acquire shape and form (more or
realize the extent to which they are inevitably and forever tied
together.
in relation, first of all, to the figure of the author. With the capitalist
figure in the field of literary studies and criticism in that it is “him” the
point of view, he says that the author’s person isn’t the object of
not who speaks in the text, but the language. Narration, exercised in
every voice”, it is the place “where all identity is lost, starting with the
very identity of the body writing”1; we will be able to identify the ways
and reader.
the French theorist’s ideas. First of all, the successive linear logic
creator and then secondly his creation, the text, is broken down- also
mentioned: that there exists “no other time than that of the
linguistic field, writing thus becomes the put into practice of the
1
Roland Barthes: “The Death of the Author” from Image, Music, Text, trans.
Stephen Heath (London: Fontana, 1977), p. 142
2
Barthes applies the metaphor of father-child so that father (author) not only comes
first but is the wise that nourishes his child (text), “The Death of the Author”, p. 145
3
“The Death of the Author”, p. 145
linear construction, text is better conceived in the structuralist mind
where multiple signs and writings both meld and collide in an infinite
indefinitely”. 4
In this sense, the author figure has to be transformed
that underlay every text- with a capital T, Text, in all its revolutionary
in the hand (in this sense, can be identified with the book), text
cannot be seen or held, but only proved; its place can only be found
4
“The Death of the Author”, p. 146. Umberto Eco, in his “Unlimited Semiosis and
Drift: Pragmaticism vs. “Pragmatism” text, explains this unlimited semiosis as a
metonymic process of association whereby meaning is ever-growing; in quoting
Peirce, “a sign is something by which we know something more”, as opposed to
hermetic semiosis in which “a sign is something by knowing which we know
something else”- this last approach, ultimately, only asserts the teleological
functioning of language and meaning, contrary to structuralist thought, or what Eco
names “the Fullness of Meaning”, where every text has a final secret/meaning to
reveal. Umberto Eco in The Limits of Interpretation, (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1994), pp. 27-30
through certain laws or rules. Sustained by language, this text comes
essence, of the signifier but the other way around- the signifier thus
becomes the crucial part of the sign, something which laid bare of its
this ultimately unifies the reading and writing activities into one sole
second appreciation of the term. The text asks for the reader’s
creating it (and not just reproducing it); analogous to the figure of the
7
“From Work to Text”, p. 158
8
“From Work to Text”, p. 157
of incidents which aren’t completely identifiable in their particularity,
the reader carries out the reading process walking through it and
call them), are combined each time in a unique way, text becoming
precise origin, and thus invalidating any filiative reading of it10, text
this strolling unique experience that is can create its meaning in that
vast stereophony11.
but this process come into being through the act of reading. But this
9
“From Work to Text”, p. 159
10
“The work is caught up in a process of filiation. Are postulated: a determination of
the work by the world (…), a consecution of works amongst themselves, and a
conformity of the work to the author”- we are hereby referring mostly to this last
two understandings. Roland Barthes: “From Work to Text”, p-160
11
From Work to Text”, p. 160
multiple centers of knowledge and culture- he gives unity to all this
contents, becoming that “space on which all the quotations that make
up a writing are inscribed without any of them being lost” 12. Writing’s
future thus sustains itself in the dissolution of the author figure only in
relation between reader and text reflects in a practical way, this is,
through the novel. Jonathan Culler speaks of the novel under the light
society articulates the world, but too, and most importantly for our
activity of reading, provide models and permit for the creation and
In this sense, the text becomes a place where the reader seeks
12
“The Death of the Author”, p. 148
13
Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of
Literature (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1975), p. 189
expectations (in being able to perceive the world through it); this is
Opposed to this comes the radical novel, who asks more of the reader
unreadable text which we know how to write but have not yet learnt
jouissance element of the text thus calls out loud for the figure of the
instance in which the text acquires its meaning, it is the place where
the infinite codes which arise from the multiple cultural languages
embedded in it, meld and collide to make meaning. Freed from its
subjectivity, the reader enjoys a text from his bodily aspect, this is, as
call the jouissance. To continue, we should point out the fact that
14
Roland Barthes in Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics
and the Study of Literature, p.190
15
Roland Barthes in Jonathan Culler: Barthes, (Glasgow: Fontana Paperbacks, 1983),
p. 93
16
Roland Barthes in Jonathan Culler: Barthes, p. 98
17
Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of
Literature, p.192
Barthes reminds us that these are functional categories rather than
classes of text: the text of jouissance is just “a later and freer stage”
parallel forces which don’t ever meet. The reader of the novel
inside it. We shall now focus on the internal aspects and functioning
of this novel under the light of structuralist thought, for here again we
hierarchy inside the (sub) systems that conform it; these are plot,
now address two of these possible levels; in doing so, we will be able
18
Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of
Literature, p.191
19
Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of
Literature, p. 192
The first level concerns that of trivial detail. In a first moment,
the purely descriptive and objective extracts of the text seem to only
feed the mimetic function and thus make it easy for the reader to
the sign is nothing other than its referent, their function only being
makes sense of the novel’s plot- he cannot construct the text’s world
makes it difficult for the reader to seize a meaning through it. Barthes
meaning, the reader will apply more effort and produce it himself; he
personal narrator. But how can we empty the text from voice? One of
20
Roland Barthes in Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics
and the Study of Literature, p.193
the methods to achieve this is precisely through the same referential
reader and the text are brought closer together in that it positions the
reader sort of inside the text: they “assert (…) what the reader might
one of those woman who; one of those days when…) serve to bring
the reader closer to the narrator, in that the meaning which is derived
voice is heard through this built up relation with the reader, or,
doing so, the reader once again will find the text problematic and
trying to do so, we always came across the other; this also happened
21
Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of
Literature, p. 195
22
This is more precisely “the displaced voice the reader grants, by proxy, to the
narrative”, Barthes in Jonathan Culler: Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism,
Linguistics and the Study of Literature, p.196
in a second moment, when trying to define in its relation in a more
“eternally written in the here and now”. Summing up, it is that tissue/
only come into being through the performative use of language and
the reader who writes/produces it: reader and text are thus forever
linked together.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Barthes, Roland: “From Work to Text” from Image, Music, Text, trans.
Barthes, Roland: “The Death of the Author” from Image, Music, Text,