1) Definition, History-Structuralism
1) Definition, History-Structuralism
1) Definition, History-Structuralism
"Meaning is always attributed to the object or idea by the human mind, and
constructed by and expressed through language: it is not merely contained in
the thing."
It means that the choice is left for the human mind. The structure of
language, or the system, ensures that we recognize difference. Well-known
examples of this process would be the choice between paired alternatives
like 'terrorist' or 'freedom fighter'. There is no neutral or objective way of
designating such a person, merely a choice of two terms which construct that
person in certain ways. It has been said that there are three versions of every
story, your version, my version, and the truth, but the case here is more
complicated than that, since all the available terms are purely linguistic -
there is no truth about these matters which exists securely outside language.
3) Major Characteristics
4) Concepts of structuralism
a) SIGN
A sign is the basic unit of langue (a given language at a given time). Every
langue is a complete system of signs. The sign is divided into two elements:
The signifier is the material aspect of the sign -- the word on paper, the spoken
word, or a traffic sign or a supermarket. First there’s the bit that you can see or
hear. One can imagine signs that are accessible to each of the senses. Audible
and visible signs have priority for Saussure because they are the types of sign
that make up most of our known languages. Such signs are called "verbal" signs
(from the Latin verba meaning "word"). The sensible part of a verbal sign (the
part accessible to the senses) is the part you see or hear. This is its signifier.
ii. Signified:
The signified is the concept that results in your mind -- the idea of a dog, or a
chair, or liberty or whatever. That meaning is not inside something, but is the
product of a set of relationships, often negatively defined. And that we do not
have direct access through language to reality itself. And, most eerily, although
we only saw the mark, we simultaneously heard it in our heads--not actually but
that part of our brain that listens out for sounds took one look at a non-existent
word and heard something too. The signified is what these visible/audible
aspects mean to us. Now we know very well that some marks mean very
different things to different people at different times. The signified is thus
always something of an interpretation that is added to the signifier.
Example: The word "cat" can mean "ginger monster" to one but to another it
means cuddly old much maligned softy who is only innocently going about its
business.
c) Code
Roland Barthes, a French structuralist, philosopher and linguist described and
demonstrated methods of literary analysis. Barthes presents his theory of five
codes to understand the underlying structure of a text. In other words, through the
study of these codes we can either recognize that which genre the text belongs to,
or recognize the characteristics of an already established genre. Barthes identified
five codes-
Hermeneutic code
Proairetic code
Semantic code
Symbolic code
Cultural code.
A brief description of these codes is necessary before moving any further.
The Hermeneutic Code
The hermeneutic code is also called the enigmatic code. It refers to those elements
of a text that are mysterious, puzzling and unexplained or incompletely explained
in the narrative and so make the reader curios to know or understand them. In
Barthes terms these elements are termed as: “snare”, “equivocation”, “jamming”
and “suspended answers”. Some of the enigmatic elements are answered in the end
of the text while some of them remain a mystery for the reader. The reader uses
his/her mental faculty to give meaning to the text.
Example: The best example may well be the genre of the detective story. We
witness a murder and the rest of the narrative is devoted to determining the
questions that are raised by the initial scene of violence. The detective spends the
story reading the clues that, only at the end, reconstructs the story of the murder.
See the Star Trek Lesson Plan for an example of a television episode that invokes
this code.
The Proairetic Code
The proairetic code is also called the code of actions. It refers to those elements
that create suspense in the text and catches the interest of the reader. Every action
of suspense held what comes next, What happens next? In this way it keeps the
interest of reader alive for the coming actions.
Example: A gunslinger draws his gun in a story and we wonder what the
resolution of this action will be. We wait if he kills his opponent or is wounded
himself. Suspense is thus created by action rather than by a reader's or a viewer's
wish to have mysteries explained.
The Semic Code
The semic code is also called the connotative code. This code refers to those
elements that give some additional meaning or connotative meaning. The
connotative meaning is often found in the characterization. This code is also
related with theme.
Example: Beowulf is often used as sign of bravery,strength.
The Symbolic Code
Symbolic code is also known as antithetical code. This code is in some way similar
as the previous code (semantic code). However, the operation of symbolic code is
wider and sets a deeper level of meaning than the previous one. The central point
of this code is actually the existence of opposition or antithetical ideas. Often, it
closely corresponds to the concept of binary opposition in order to unveil the
hidden messages through this symbolic code where new meanings possibly come
across from conflicting and opposing ideas.
The Cultural Code
The last code is also known as the referential code. It refers to the elements that
give common knowledge. By this code a reader gets the physical, physiological,
medical, psychological, literary or historical knowledge.
Example: The gnomic code is one of the cultural codes and refers to those cultural
codes that are tied to clichés, proverbs or popular sayings of various sorts.