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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

Roland Gérard Barthes


(born Nov. 12, 1915, Cherbourg, France — died March 25, 1980, Paris) French social and literary critic. His early books examined the arbitrariness of the constructs of language and applied similar analyses to popular-culture phenomena. He analyzed mass culture in Mythologies (1957). On Racine (1963) set off a literary furor, pitting him against more traditional French literary scholars. His later contributions to semiotics included the even more radical S/Z (1970); The Empire of Signs (1970), his study of Japan; and other significant works that brought his theories wide (if belated) attention in the 1970s and helped establish structuralism as one of the leading intellectual movements of the 20th century. In 1976 he became the first person to hold the chair of literary semiology at the Collège de France.

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Modern Design Dictionary: Roland Barthes

(1915-80)

Influential in the development of cultural studies and subsequently widely read by design historians, the impact of Barthes's writings in Britain was slowed somewhat by delays in translation from the French. In the case of Mythologies (1957), his most widely known book in the context of design, it was not translated for fifteen years. From 1960 onwards Barthes taught courses involving the sociology of signs, symbols, and representations at the École Pratique des Haut Études, Paris, playing an enduring role in debates about semiology. In Mythologies he laid out his approach in an essay entitled ‘Myth Today’. In other essays he explored the meanings of a variety of occurrences and objects in everyday life. These ranged from wrestling and striptease to advertisements, photography, and automobiles, particularly ‘The New Citroën’ (the DS19). He saw the latter as ‘almost the exact equivalent of the great Gothic cathedrals…the supreme creation of an era, conceived with passion by unknown artists and consumed in image if not in usage by a whole population which appropriates them as a purely magical object’. He also wrote about meaning in the context of fashion in The Fashion System of 1967 in which he discussed layers of meanings in fashion language, dress codes, and style. Other key texts by Barthes included Elements of Semiology (1964) and The Pleasure of the Text (1973). In 1976 he was appointed Chair of Literary Semiology at the Collège de France. See also Semiotics.

 
Photography Encyclopedia: Roland Barthes

Barthes, Roland (1915-80), French writer, critic, and literary theorist, best known for his pioneering work on cultural studies. Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography (1980) is his only book dedicated entirely to photography. He elaborates the concept of the punctum to focus on the personal and emotional experience of the photograph as physically connected to its subject. This emphasis is related to his earlier essay ‘The Death of the Author’ (in Image Music Text, 1977), which criticizes the myth of authorial intention as the source of a work's meaning, to emphasize instead the role of the reader. Camera Lucida is stylistically and conceptually related to his other late works, The Pleasures of the Text (1973), Roland Barthes by Roland Barthes (1975), and A Lover's Discourse (1977), in their fragmented and personalized style, and in blurring distinctions between criticism and poetic, semi-fictional texts. His influence on theories of photographic meaning had been crucial since the publication of his essay collection Mythologies (1957), one of the most significant attempts to bring the methodology of semiotics to bear on popular culture, including its uses of photography. Barthes analyses and criticizes bourgeois culture without denying its pleasures. Myth, he argues, is a mode of speech which successfully hides the ideological nature of representation by making it appear entirely natural and self-evident. The main target of his criticism is bourgeois culture's denial of the opacity of representation, its insistence on the possibility of realism.

— Patrizia di Bello

Bibliography

  • Rabaté, J. M. (ed.), Writing the Image after Barthes (1997)
 

Barthes, Roland (1915-80). As a writer, Barthes evades classification. He is famous as a semiologist and literary theorist, a high priest of Structuralism, but in fact his output is very varied. Many of his most important writings are essays, in which the personal investment of the writer becomes increasingly evident. To use his own distinction, he is less an écrivant (one who uses language instrumentally) than an écrivain (one who works on and with words).

Even in his ‘autobiographical’ Roland Barthes par Roland Barthes (1975), he remains discreet about his personal life. He was born into the Bayonne bourgeoisie; his father, a naval officer, died the year after his birth, but he remained very close to his mother until her death shortly before his own. In 1934 he suffered an attack of tuberculosis, an illness which dogged him until 1947; he passed the war years in a sanatorium. He read classics and subsequently taught overseas for a time, but did not have a conventional academic career: it was only in 1960, after many years of research, writing, and journalism, that he became a director of studies at the École Pratique des Hautes Études. Here he conducted a famous seminar, which led to many of his most important books. In 1976 he was elected to a chair of literary semiology at the Collège de France.

The guiding thread running through Barthes's writings is a passionate concern with language, signs, and literature. His work does not develop in a straight line, but by a series of twists and turns; he compared it to a spiral in which the same element reappears, but transformed. A chronological account of his writings is therefore likely to give a false impression of coherence. As he wrote, he acted as a sounding-board, assimilating and reworking a series of favourite writers: Gide, Brecht, Saussure, Lacan, Proust, Nietzsche, etc.—the list of acknowledged masters is a long one, and it is by no means sure that he named the most important figures.

His first book, and one of his most famous, is Le Degré zéro de l'écriture (1953), an essay on modern literature much influenced by Sartre; here he attempts a socio-historical description of the linguistic choices made by French writers, stressing the tragic lack of a common language in ‘notre modernité’. At about the same time, however, his Michelet (1954), offers an Bachelardian description of the inner world revealed in Michelet's writings. His own commitment at this period to left-wing values is evident in the influential Mythologies (1957), a briliantly witty and perceptive critique of the ideological codes at work in all kinds of cultural product, from all-in wrestling to song and cinema.

Mythologies ends with a theoretical attempt to define ‘le mythe aujourd'hui’, and this marks the beginning of Barthes's Structuralist period, what he later called his ‘petit délire scientifique’. His aim was to develop the insights of Saussure and modern linguistics and create a new science of signs, semiology, which would describe the signifying systems that structure the world around us. Éléments de sémiologie (1965) was followed by Système de la mode (1967), a dry Structuralist description of the codes of fashion writing. However, much of Barthes's best writing in the 1960s (and thereafter) took the form of essays and articles, both critical and theoretical, one of the most important being the ‘Introduction à l'analyse structurale du récit’ (1966). The Essais critiques of 1964 were later completed by Nouveaux essais critiques (1972), and the posthumous L'Obvie et l'obtus (1982), Le Bruissement de la langue (1984), and L'Aventure sémiologique (1985).

The 1960s also saw a famous polemic, provoked by the Sorbonne professor Raymond Picard's attack on Barthes's idiosyncratic Sur Racine (1963). In Nouvelle critique ou nouvelle imposture (1965), Picard took Barthes to task for irresponsible neglect of basic standards of scholarship [see Literary History, 2]. Barthes riposted vigorously in Critique et vérité (1966), distinguishing criticism from science. This quarrel fixed him in the public eye as a leader of such new (and, for some, worrying) tendencies in criticism as the proclamation of the ‘death of the author’ and the consequent promotion of the critic.

The end of the 1960s saw Barthes, much influenced by Lacan, Derrida, and Kristeva, moving away from a would-be scientific Structuralism and stressing the disruptive, plural values associated with ‘le texte’. This is evident in S/Z (1970), a remarkable study of Balzac's Sarrazine, where the Structuralist search for intelligibility (the codes of reading) is allied to a stress on difference and openness and a highly personal, symbolic reading. At about the same time he published a study of Japan, L'Empire des signes (1970), a happy counterweight to Mythologies, and an essay on the textual quality of three apparently very different writers, Sade, Fourier, Loyola (1971). The latter work prefigures the aphoristic Le Plaisir du texte (1973), which offers a psycho-analytically inspired defence of the modern, subversive text, and links reading, writing, and ‘text’ to the body, pleasure, and ‘jouissance’.

Barthes's final years are marked by three major books in which he comes ever closer to writing about himself, and indeed, to the scandal of some devotees, to writing a novel. Roland Barthes par Roland Barthes (1975) plays with the forms of autobiography and textbook, setting before the reader an elusive, fragmentary, contradictory portrait of the writing self. Fragments d'un discours amoureux (1977), the record of a seminar, uses a similarly fractured form, full of allusions to Goethe's Werther, to speak indirectly of his own experience of (homosexual) love. And finally, La Chambre claire (1980), modestly subtitled ‘Note sur la photographie’, comes the closest of all his works to a Romantic self-expression worthy of one of the great loves of his final years, Chateaubriand. His death in a street accident outside the Collège de France robbed France of a writer at the height of his powers.

[Peter France]

Bibliography

  • A. Lavers, Roland Barthes: Structuralism and After (1982)
  • J. Culler, Barthes (1983)
  • P. Roger, Roland Barthes, roman (1986)
 
Philosophy Dictionary: Roland Barthes

Barthes, Roland (1915-80) French literary theorist and philosopher, whose work in semiotics made him one of the founding fathers of the more general applications of structuralism, although his own journey took him from Marxism and existentialism, through structuralism to post-structuralism. He pioneered the study of the meanings behind symbols of mass-culture, media, advertising and fashion. His writings include Mythologies (1957-72, trs. under the same title, 1972), and Critique et vérité (1966, trs. as Criticism and Truth, 1987).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Barthes, Roland
(rôläN' bärt) , 1915–80, French critic. Barthes was one of the founding figures in the theoretical movement centered around the journal Tel Quel. In his earlier works, such as Writing Degree Zero (tr. 1953) and Mythologies (1957, tr. 1972), he argued that literature, like all forms of communication, is essentially a system of signs. As such, he argued that it encodes various ideologies or “myths,” to be decoded in terms of its own organizing principles or internal structures. He was strongly influenced by the linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, and his ideas, as expressed in works such as S/Z (1970, tr. 1974) and Empire of Signs (1970, tr. 1982), became more eclectic. Barthes has had an enormous influence on American literary theory.

Bibliography

See studies by J. Culler (1983), P. Lombardo (1989), and M. B. Wiseman (1989).

 
Dictionary: Barthes  (bärt) pronunciation, Roland 1915–1980.

French critic who applied semiology, the study of signs and symbols, to literary and social criticism.


 
Quotes By: Roland Barthes

Quotes:

"Other countries drink to get drunk, and this is accepted by everyone; in France, drunkenness is a consequence, never an intention. A drink is felt as the spinning out of a pleasure, not as the necessary cause of an effect which is sought: wine is not only a philter, it is also the leisurely act of drinking."

"There is only one way left to escape the alienation of present day society: to retreat ahead of it."

"The politician being interviewed clearly takes a great deal of trouble to imagine an ending to his sentence: and if he stopped short? His entire policy would be jeopardized!"

"Language is a skin: I rub my language against the other. It is as if I had words instead of fingers, or fingers at the tip of my words. My language trembles with desire."

"All official institutions of language are repeating machines: school, sports, advertising, popular songs, news, all continually repeat the same structure, the same meaning, often the same words: the stereotype is a political fact, the major figure of ideology."

"There are two kinds of liberalism. A liberalism which is always, subterraneously authoritative and paternalistic, on the side of one's good conscience. And then there is a liberalism which is more ethical than political; one would have to find another name for this. Something like a profound suspension of judgment."

See more famous quotes by Roland Barthes

 
Wikipedia: Roland Barthes
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Roland Barthes
Semiotics
General concepts

Biosemiotics · Code
Computational semiotics
Connotation · Decode · Denotation
Encode · Lexical · Modality
Salience · Sign · Sign relation
Sign relational complex · Semiosis
Semiosphere · Literary semiotics
Triadic relation · Umwelt · Value

Methods

Commutation test
Paradigmatic analysis
Syntagmatic analysis

Semioticians

Roland Barthes · Marcel Danesi
Ferdinand de Saussure
Umberto Eco · Louis Hjelmslev
Roman Jakobson · Roberta Kevelson
Charles Peirce · Thomas Sebeok

Related topics

Aestheticization as propaganda
Aestheticization of violence
Semiotics of Ideal Beauty

Roland Barthes (November 12, 1915March 25, 1980) (pronounced [ʀɔlɑ̃ baʀt]) was a French literary critic, literary and social theorist, philosopher, and semiologist. Barthes' work extended over many fields and he influenced the development of schools of theory including structuralism, semiology, existentialism, Marxism and post-structuralism.

Life

Roland Barthes was born on November 12 1915 in the town of Cherbourg in Normandy. He was the son of naval officer Louis Barthes, who was killed in a battle in the North Sea before Roland turned one. His mother, Henriette Barthes, and his aunt and grandmother raised him in the French city of Bayonne where he received his first exposure to culture, learning piano from his musically gifted aunt. When he was nine his mother moved to Paris and it was there that he would grow to manhood (though his attachment to his provincial roots would remain strong throughout his life).

Barthes showed great promise as a student and spent the period from 1935 to 1939 at the Sorbonne, earning a licence in classical letters. Unfortunately, he was also plagued by ill health throughout this period, suffering from tuberculosis that often had to be treated in the isolation of sanatoria. His repeated physical breakdowns disrupted his academic career, affecting his studies and his ability to take certain qualifying examinations. However, it also kept him out of military service during World War II, and, while being kept out of the major French universities meant he had to travel a great deal for teaching positions, Barthes later professed an intentional avoidance of major degree-awarding universities throughout his career.

His life from 1939 to 1948 was largely spent obtaining a license in grammar and philology, publishing his first papers, taking part in a little pre-medical study and continuing to struggle with his health. In 1948 he returned to purely academic work, gaining numerous short-term positions at institutes in France, Romania and Egypt. During this time he contributed to the leftist Parisian paper Combat, out of which grew his first full length work Writing Degree Zero (1953). In 1952 Barthes was able to settle at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique when he studied lexicology and sociology. During his seven-year period there he began writing bimonthly installments to Les Lettres Nouvelles, a popular series of essays that dismantled myths of popular culture (gathered in the Mythologies collection published in 1957).

Barthes spent the early 60s exploring the fields of semiology and structuralism, chairing various faculty positions around France, and continuing to produce more full-length studies. Many of his works were discursive to traditional academic views of literary theory and specific, renowned figures of literature. His unorthodox thinking led to a conflict with another French thinker, Raymond Picard, who attacked the New Criticism (a label with which he inaccurately identified Barthes) for being obscure and disrespectful to the culture’s literary roots. Barthes' rebuttal in Criticism and Truth (1966) accused the old, bourgeois criticism of being unconcerned with the finer points of language and capable of selective ignorance towards challenging concepts of theories like Marxism.

By the late 1960s Barthes had established a reputation. He traveled to America and Japan, delivering a presentation at Johns Hopkins University, and producing his best known work, the 1967 essay “The Death of the Author”, which, in light of the growing influence of Jacques Derrida's deconstructionist theory, would prove to be a transitional piece investigating the logical ends of structuralist thought. Barthes continued to contribute with Philippe Sollers to the avant-garde literary magazine Tel Quel, which was very much concerned with the kinds of theory being developed in his work. In 1970 Barthes produced what many consider to be his most prodigious work, the dense critical reading of Balzac’s Sarrasine entitled S/Z. Throughout the 70s Barthes continued to develop his literary criticism, pursuing new ideals of textuality and novelistic neutrality through his works.

In 1977 he was elected to a rather lauded position as chair of Sémiologie Littéraire at the Collège de France. Sadly, this came in the same year that his mother died. The loss of the woman who had raised and cared for him was a terrible blow to Barthes. He had often written works of theory on photography, dating back as far as his individual works in Mythologies. His last great work was Camera Lucida. The text, which was a meditation on an old picture of his mother, was half theory of communication through the photographic medium and half act of grief to his mother’s memory. Roland Barthes died less than three years after his mother. On 25 February 1980, after leaving a lunch party held by François Mitterrand (who would be elected president of France the next year), Barthes was struck by a laundry truck while walking home through the streets of Paris. He succumbed to his injuries a month later and died on 25 March.

Works and ideas

Early works

Barthes' earliest work was very much a reaction to the trend of existentialist philosophy that was prominent during the 1940s, specifically towards the figurehead of existentialism Jean-Paul Sartre. In his work What Is Literature? (1947) Sartre finds himself to be disenchanted with both established forms of writing, and more experimental avant-garde forms, which he feels alienates readers. Barthes’ response is to try to find what can be considered unique and original in writing. He determines in Writing Degree Zero (1953) that language and style are both matters that appeal to conventions, and are thus not purely creative. Rather, form, or what Barthes calls ‘writing’, the specific way an individual chooses to manipulate conventions of style for a desired effect, is the unique and creative act. One’s form is vulnerable to becoming a convention once it has been made available to the public. This means that being creative is an ongoing process of continual change and reaction. He saw Albert Camus’s The Stranger as an ideal example of this notion for its sincere lack of any embellishment or flair.

In Michelet, a critical look at the work of French historian Jules Michelet, Barthes continues to develop these notions and apply them to broader fields. He explains that Michelet’s views of history and society are obviously flawed, but that in studying his works one should not seek to learn from Michelet’s claims. Rather, one should maintain a critical distance and learn from his errors. Understanding how and why his thinking is flawed will show more about his period of history than his own observations. Similarly, Barthes felt avant-garde writing should be praised for maintaining just such a distance between its audience and its work. By maintaining an obvious artificiality rather than making claims to great subjective truths, avant-garde writers assure their audiences maintain an objective perspective in reading their work. In this sense, Barthes believed that art should be critical and interrogate the world rather than seek to explain it like Michelet would.

Semiology and myth

Barthes' many monthly contributions that made up Mythologies (1957) would often interrogate pieces of cultural material to expose how bourgeois society used them to assert its values upon others. For instance, portrayal of wine in French society as a robust and healthy habit would be a bourgeois ideal perception contradicted by certain realities (i.e. that wine can be unhealthy and inebriating). He found semiology, the study of signs, useful in these interrogations. Barthes explained that these bourgeois cultural myths were second-order signs, or significations. A picture of a full, dark bottle is a signifier relating to a signified: a fermented, alcoholic beverage - wine. However, the bourgeois take this signified and apply their own emphasis to it, making ‘wine’ a new signifier, this time relating to a new signified: the idea of healthy, robust, relaxing wine. Motivations for such manipulations vary from a desire to sell products to a simple desire to maintain the status quo. These insights brought Barthes very much in line with similar Marxist theory.

In The Fashion System Barthes showed how this adulteration of signs could easily be translated into words. In this work he explained how in the fashion world any word could be loaded with idealistic bourgeois emphasis. Thus, if popular fashion says that a ‘blouse’ is ideal for a certain situation or ensemble, this idea is immediately naturalized and accepted as truth, even though the actual sign could just as easily be interchangeable with ‘skirt’, ‘vest’ or any number of combinations. In the end Barthes' Mythologies became absorbed itself into bourgeois culture, as he found many third parties asking him to comment on a certain cultural phenomenon, being interested in his control over his readership. This turn of events caused him to question the overall utility of demystifying culture for the masses, thinking it might be a fruitless attempt, and drove him deeper in his search for individualistic meaning in art.

Structuralism and its limits

As Barthes' work with structuralism began to flourish around the time of his debates with Picard, his investigation of structure focused on revealing the importance of language in writing, which he felt was overlooked by old criticism. Barthes' “Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narratives” is concerned with examining the correspondence between the structure of a sentence and that of a larger narrative, thus allowing narrative to be viewed along linguistic lines. Barthes split this work into three hierarchical levels: ‘functions’, ‘actions’ and ‘narrative’. ‘Functions’ are the elementary pieces of a work, such as a single descriptive word that can be used to identify a character. That character would be an ‘action’, and consequently one of the elements that make up the narrative. Barthes was able to use these distinctions to evaluate how certain key ‘functions’ work in forming characters. For example key words like ‘dark’, ‘mysterious’ and ‘odd’, when integrated together, formulate a specific kind of character or ‘action’. By breaking down the work into such fundamental distinctions Barthes was able to judge the degree of realism given functions have in forming their actions and consequently with what authenticity a narrative can be said to reflect on reality. Thus, his structuralist theorizing became another exercise in his ongoing attempts to dissect and expose the misleading mechanisms of bourgeois culture.

While Barthes found structuralism to be a useful tool and believed that discourse of literature could be formalized, he didn’t believe it could become strict scientific endeavour. In the late 1960s, radical movements were taking place in literary criticism. The post-structuralist movement and the deconstructionism of Jacques Derrida were testing the bounds of the structuralist theory that Barthes' work exemplified. Derrida identified the flaw of structuralism as its reliance on a transcendental signified; a symbol of constant, universal meaning would be essential as an orienting point in such a closed off system. This is to say that without some regular standard of measurement, a system of criticism that references nothing outside of the actual work itself could never prove useful. But since there are no symbols of constant and universal significance, the entire premise of structuralism as a means of evaluating writing (or anything) is hollow.

Transition

Such groundbreaking thought led Barthes to consider the limitations of not just signs and symbols, but also Western culture’s dependency on beliefs of constancy and ultimate standards. He travelled to Japan in 1966 where he wrote Empire of Signs (published in 1970), a meditation on Japanese culture’s contentment in the absence of a search for a transcendental signified. He notes that in Japan there is no emphasis on a great focus point by which to judge all other standards, describing the centre of Tokyo, the Emperor’s Palace, as not a great overbearing entity, but a silent and non-descript presence, avoided and unconsidered. As such, Barthes reflects on the ability of signs in Japan to exist for their own merit, retaining only the significance naturally imbued by their signifiers. Such a society contrasts greatly to the one he dissected in Mythologies, which was revealed to be always asserting a greater, more complex significance on top of the natural one.

In the wake of this trip Barthes wrote what is largely considered to be his best-known work, the essay “The Death of the Author” (1968). Barthes saw the notion of the author, or authorial authority, in the criticism of literary text as the forced projection of an ultimate meaning of the text. By imagining an ultimate intended meaning of a piece of literature one could infer an ultimate explanation for it. But Barthes points out that the great proliferation of meaning in language and the unknowable state of the author’s mind makes any such ultimate realization impossible. As such, the whole notion of the ‘knowable text’ acts as little more than another delusion of Western bourgeois culture. Indeed the idea of giving a book or poem an ultimate end coincides with the notion of making it consumable, something that can be used up and replaced in a capitalist market. “The Death of the Author” is sometimes considered to be a post-structuralist work, since it moves past the conventions of trying to quantify literature, but others see it as more of transitional phase for Barthes in his continuing effort to find significance in culture outside of the bourgeois norms. Indeed the notion of the author being irrelevant was already a factor of structuralist thinking.

Textuality and S/Z

Since there can be no originating anchor of meaning in the possible intentions of the author, Barthes considers what other sources of meaning or significance can be found in literature. He concludes that since meaning can’t come from the author, it must be actively created by the reader through a process of textual analysis. In his ambitious S/Z (1970), Barthes applies this notion in a massive analysis of a short story by Balzac called Sarrasine. The end result was a reading that established five major codes for determining various kinds of significance, with numerous lexias (a term created by Barthes to describe elements that can take on various meanings for various readers) throughout the text. The codes led him to define the story as having a capacity for plurality of meaning, limited by its dependence upon strictly sequential elements (such as a definite timeline that has to be followed by the reader and thus restricts their freedom of analysis). From this project Barthes concludes that an ideal text is one that is reversible, or open to the greatest variety of independent interpretations and not restrictive in meaning. A text can be reversible by avoiding the restrictive devices that Sarrasine suffered from such as strict timelines and exact definitions of events. He describes this as the difference between the writerly text, in which the reader is active in a creative process, and a readerly text in which they are restricted to just reading. The project helped Barthes identify what it was he sought in literature: an openness for interpretation.

Neutral and novelistic writing

In the late 1970s Barthes was increasingly concerned with the conflict of two types of language: that of popular culture, which he saw as limiting and pigeonholing in its titles and descriptions, and neutral, which he saw as open and noncommittal. He called these two conflicting modes the Doxa and the Para-doxa. While Barthes had shared sympathies with Marxist thought in the past (or at least parallel criticisms), he felt that, despite its anti-ideological stance, Marxist theory was just as guilty of using violent language with assertive meanings, as was bourgeois literature. In this way they were both Doxa and both culturally assimilating. As a reaction to this he wrote The Pleasure of the Text (1975), a study that focused on a subject matter he felt was equally outside of the realm of both conservative society and militant leftist thinking: hedonism. By writing about a subject that was rejected by both social extremes of thought, Barthes felt he could avoid the dangers of the limiting language of the Doxa. The theory he developed out of this focus claimed that while reading for pleasure is a kind of social act, through which the reader exposes oneself to the ideas of the writer, the final cathartic climax of this pleasurable reading, which he termed the bliss in reading, is a point in which one becomes lost within the text. This loss of self within the text or immersion within the text, signifies a final impact of reading that is experienced outside of the social realm and free from the influence of culturally associative language and is thus neutral.

Despite this newest theory of reading, Barthes remained concerned with the difficulty of achieving truly neutral writing, which required an avoidance of any labels that might carry an implied meaning or identity towards a given object. Even carefully crafted neutral writing could be taken in an assertive context through the incidental use of a word with a loaded social context. Barthes felt his past works, like Mythologies, had suffered from this. He became interested in finding the best method for creating neutral writing, and he decided to try to create a novelistic form of rhetoric that would not seek to impose its meaning on the reader. One product of this endeavour was A Lover's Discourse: Fragments in 1977, in which he presents the fictionalized reflections of a lover seeking to identify and be identified by an anonymous amorous other. The unrequited lover’s search for signs by which to show and receive love makes evident illusory myths involved in such a pursuit. The lover’s attempts to assert himself into a false, ideal reality is involved in a delusion that exposes the contradictory logic inherent in such a search. Yet at the same time the novelistic character is a sympathetic one, and is thus open not just to criticism but also understanding from the reader. The end result is one that challenges the reader’s views of social constructs of love, without trying to assert any definitive theory of meaning.

Photography and Henriette Barthes

Throughout his career, Barthes had an interest in photography and its potential to communicate actual events. Many of his monthly myth articles in the 50s had attempted to show how a photographic image could represent implied meanings and thus be used by bourgeois culture to infer ‘naturalistic truths’. But he still considered the photograph to have a unique potential for presenting a completely real representation of the world. When his mother, Henriette Barthes, died in 1977 he began writing Camera Lucida as an attempt to explain the unique significance a picture of her as a child carried for him. Reflecting on the relationship between the obvious symbolic meaning of a photograph (which he called the studium) and that which is purely personal and dependent on the individual, that which ‘pierces the viewer’ (which he called the punctum), Barthes was troubled by the fact that such distinctions collapse when personal significance is communicated to others and can have its symbolic logic rationalized. Barthes found the solution to this fine line of personal meaning in the form of his mother’s picture. Barthes explained that a picture is not so much a solid representation of ‘what is’ as ‘what was’ and therefore ‘what has ceased to be’. It does not make reality solid but serves as a reminder of the world’s inconstant and ever changing state. Because of this there is something uniquely personal contained in the photograph of Barthes’ mother that cannot be removed from his subjective: the recurrent feeling of loss experienced whenever he looks at it. As one of his final works before his death, Camera Lucida was both an ongoing reflection on the complicated relations between subjectivity, meaning and cultural society as well as a touching dedication to his mother and description of the depth of his grief.

Posthumous publications

A posthumous book came out in 1987 in English, Incidents, which contained fragments from his journals: his Soires de Paris (a 1979 extract from his erotic diary of life in Paris); an earlier diary he kept (his erotic encounters with boys in Morocco); and Light of the Sud Ouest (his childhood memories of rural French life). In November 2007, Yale University Press will publish a new translation into English (by Richard Howard) of Barthes's little known work What is sport. This work bears a considerable resemblance to Mythologies and was originally commissioned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as the text for a documentary film directed by Hubert Aquin.

Influence

Roland Barthes' incisive criticism contributed to the development of theoretical schools such as structuralism, semiology, existentialism, Marxism and post-structuralism. While his influence is mainly found in these theoretical fields with which his work brought him into contact, it is also felt in every field concerned with the representation of information and models of communication, including computers, photography, music, and literature. One consequence of Barthes' breadth of focus is that his legacy includes no following of thinkers dedicated to modeling themselves after him. The fact that Barthes’ work was ever adapting and refuting notions of stability and constancy means there is no canon of thought within his theory to model one's thoughts upon, and thus no "Barthesism". While this means that his name and ideas lack the visibility of a Marx, Einstein, or Freud, Barthes was after all opposed to the notion of adopting inferred ideologies, regardless of their source. In this sense, after his work giving rise to the notion of individualist thought and adaptability over conformity, any thinker or theorist who takes an oppositional stance to inferred meanings within culture can be thought to be following Barthes’ example. Indeed such an individual would have much to gain from the views of Barthes, whose many works remain valuable sources of insight and tools for the analysis of meaning in any given manmade representation.

Key terms

"Readerly" and "writerly" are terms Barthes employs both to delineate one type of literature from another and to implicitly interrogate ways of reading, like positive or negative habits the modern reader brings into one's experience with the text itself. These terms are most explicitly fleshed out in "S/Z", while the essay "From Work to Text", from "Image--Music--Text" (1977) provides an analogous parallel look at the active and passive, postmodern and modern, ways of interacting with a text.

Readerly Text: A text that makes no requirement of the reader to "write" or "produce" his or her own meanings. The reader may passively locate "ready-made" meaning. Barthes writes that these sorts of text are "controlled by the principle of non-contradiction" (156), that is, they do not disturb the "common sense," or "Doxa," of the surrounding culture. The "readerly texts," moreover, "are products [that] make up the enormous mass of our literature" (5). Within this category, there is a spectrum of "replete literature," which comprises "any classic (readerly) texts" that work "like a cupboard where meanings are shelved, stacked, [and] safeguarded" (S/Z p.200).

Writerly Text: A text that aspires to the proper goal of literature and criticism: "... to make the reader no longer a consumer but a producer of the text" (4). Writerly texts and ways of reading constitute, in short, an active rather than passive way of interacting with a culture and its texts. A culture and its texts, Barthes writes, should never be accepted in their given forms and traditions. As opposed to the "readerly texts" as "product," the "writerly text is ourselves writing, before the infinite play of the world is traversed, intersected, stopped, plasticized by some singular system (Ideology, Genus, Criticism) which reduces the plurality of entrances, the opening of networks, the infinity of languages" (5). Thus reading becomes for Barthes "not a parasitical act, the reactive complement of a writing," but rather a "form of work" (10).

Barthes, Roland. S/Z: An Essay. Trans. Richard Miller. New York: Hill and Wang, 1974.

"The author" and "the scriptor" are terms Barthes uses to describe different ways of thinking about the creators of texts. "The author" is our traditional concept of the lone genius creating a work of literature or other piece of writing by the powers of his or her original imagination. For Barthes, such a figure is no longer viable. The insights offered by an array of modern thought, including the insights of Surrealism, have rendered the term obsolete. In place of the author, the modern world presents us with a figure Barthes calls the "scriptor," whose only power is to combine pre-existing texts in new ways. Barthes believes that all writing draws on previous texts, norms, and conventions, and that these are the things to which we must turn to understand a text. As a way of asserting the relative unimportance of the writer's biography compared to these textual and generic conventions, Barthes says that the scriptor has no past, but is born with the text. He also argues that, in the absence of the idea of an "author-God" to control the meaning of a work, interpretive horizons are opened up considerably for the active reader. As Barthes puts it, "the death of the author is the birth of the reader."

Barthes, Roland. Image/Music/Text. Trans. Stephen Heath. New York: Noonday, 1977.

Criticism

In 1971 Barthes wrote "The Last Happy Writer", the title of which refers to Voltaire. In the essay he commented on the problems of the modern thinker after discovering the relativism in thought and philosophy, discrediting previous philosophers who avoided this difficulty. Disagreeing roundly with Barthes' description of Voltaire, Daniel Gordon, the translator & editor of Candide (The Bedford Series in History and Culture), wrote that "never has one brilliant writer so thoroughly misunderstood another."

Bibliography

  • Roland Barthes by Roland Barthes (In this so-called autobiography, Barthes interrogates himself as a text.)
  • Writer Sollers
  • A Barthes Reader
  • Camera Lucida
  • Critical Essays
  • The Eiffel Tower and other Mythologies
  • Elements of Semiology
  • Empire of Signs
  • The Fashion System
  • The Grain of the Voice
  • Image-Music-Text
  • Incidents
  • A Lover's Discourse
  • Michelet
  • Mythologies
  • The Neutral
  • New Critical Essays
  • On Racine
  • The Pleasure of the Text
  • The Responsibility of Forms
  • The Rustle of Language
  • Sade/Fourier/Loyola
  • The Semiotic Challenge
  • S/Z: An Essay ISBN 0-374-52167-0
  • Writing Degree Zero ISBN 0-374-52139-5
  • What is Sport ISBN 9780300116045
His Works
  • Essais critiques (1981), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Le Degré zéro de l'écriture suivi de Nouveaux essais critiques (1972), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Le plaisir du texte (1973), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Litérature et réalité (1982), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Michelet (1988), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Mythologies (1957, Seuil:Paris.
  • Œuvres complètes (1993), Editions du Seuil:[Paris].
  • Poétique du récit (1977), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Recherche de Proust (1980), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • S/Z (1970), Seuil:[Paris].
  • Sade, Fourier, Loyola (1980), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • Sur Racine (1979), Editions du Seuil:[Paris]
  • Système de la mode (1967), Editions du Seuil:Paris.
  • "Éléments de sémiologie" (1964), Communications 4, Seuil:Paris.
  • "Préface" (1978), La Parole Intermédiaire, F. Flahault, Seuil:Paris
Translations to English
  • A Barthes Reader (1982), Hill and Wang, New York.
  • A lover's Discourse : Fragments (1990), Penguin Books:London.
  • Camera Lucida : Reflections on Photography (1981), Hill and Wang :New York.
  • Criticism and Truth (1987), The Athlone Pr.:London.
  • Elements of Semiology (1968), Hill and Wang:New York.
  • Image, Music, Text (1977), Hill and Wang:New York.
  • Incidents (1992), University of California Press:Berkeley.
  • Michelet (1987), B.Blackwell:Oxford.
  • Mythologies (1972), Hill and Wang:New York.
  • New critical essays (1990), University of California Press:Berkeley.
  • On Racine (1992), University of California Press:Berkeley
  • Roland Barthes (1988), Macmillan Pr.:London.
  • The Eiffel Tower, and other mythologies (1997), University of California Press:Berkeley.
  • The Fashion system=[Systeme de la mode] (1967), University of California Pr.:Berkeley.
  • The Grain of the Voice : interviews 1962-1980 (1985), Jonathan Cape : London.
  • The Pleasure of the Text (1975), Hill and Wang:New York.
  • The Responsibility of Forms : Critical essays on music, art, and repre (1985), Basil Blackwell:Oxford.
  • The Rustle of Language (1986), B.Blackwell:Oxford.
  • The Semiotic Challenge (1994), University of California Press Berkeley.
  • What is Sport (2007), Yale University Press: London and New Haven
  • Writer Sollers (1987), University of Minnesota Press:Minneapolis.
  • Writing Degree Zero (1968), Hill and Wang:New York.

Works on Roland Barthes

  • Louis-Jean Calvet, trans Sarah Wykes (1994), Roland Barthes: A Biography, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, ISBN 0-253-34987-7 (This is a popular biography)
  • Michael Moriarty, Roland Barthes, Stanford University Press, Stanford California, 1991 (Explains various works of Roland Barthes)

References

  • Graham, Allen. Roland Barthes. London: Routledge, 2003
  • Wasserman, George R. Roland Barthes. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1981

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