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RJOE JOURNAL 2018, 2018
The impact of Reader Response Theory or Criticism on literary criticism over the past thirty-five years has been profound and wide-ranging. It emerged in the 1970s as an influential critical theory of the Post-Structuralist tradition firmly establishing the readers' role in interpreting/analysing literary texts. In essence, Reader-response theories reject New Criticism, the dominant literary theory and criticism from the late 1930s through the 1950s. The Reader Response critics claimed that the text comes alive only with the readers' active participation and interaction with the text. Here in the paper, I have tried to point what are the views of Roland Barthes about the author and the reader, what role does he assign to the reader and what place the reader has taken in the history of Literary Criticism. Keywords: modern scripture, literary theory and criticism, author, the role of reader, position and difference of reader, expectations and violations, deferment and satisfaction, formulation and un-formulation and restructuring of expectation, gap-filling etc
thought about his research on the split personality, on ancient Egyptian medicine, a topic on hysteria and hypnotism in the work of Wagner, then about a general examination of neurosis in literature, he chooses to study medical observation in the naturalist novel. He is very enthusiastic and confident that he has found a new intellectual way to reconcile art and science. The young medical student has literary ambitions and the thesis gives him the opportunity to write and to deliver a text to the writers he admires. Saint-Pol-Roux, Joris-Karl Huysmans and Remy de Gourmont appreciate his text. The committee of the dissertation is also satisfied. But a few years later, Segalen disavows this thesis. The Cliniciens ès lettres would have become dishonorable: They testify of a period of my mental life when I dreamt of an alliance of scientific research and literature; I reject it now, being at a point where I no longer accept any compromise in the artwork -the only existing thing.
Arts the Journal of the Sydney University Arts Association, 2012
Človek a spoločnosť, 2019
This text presents the concept of the romantic author in a broader context. Firstly, it points out its roots connected with antics (Bennett, 2005), then it describes its pre-concept, which is rooted during the rise of the typography (Ong, 2005), and finally it directly concentrates on the era where this concept is truly formed (Abrams, 1958). Based on these opening statements, the author of this text defines the concept of the romantic author in the sense of an individual sovereign creator in the context of western traditional authorship. Then the text points out its main goal to concentrate on the selected concepts, in order to demonstrate the contemporary overcoming of the author who is grounded in the western tradition. The author of this text uses an interdisciplinary approach in order to describe the topic, but primarily he prefers the approach of the media epistemology, based on which he classifies the subject of his interest in three key categories: firstly, he defines the concept of the romantic author in terms of its birth and its non-global character; secondly, he is oriented on the metaphor of the death of the author (Barthes, 1984), which Carpentier (2011) considers as a starting point for the weakening of the sovereign authorial position in order to present fantasies, which reflect this shift; and thirdly, he is concentrated on the term produsage (Bruns, 2008), where the author eventually (not just metaphorically) disappears, and points out the necessity of the produsage liberation from its techno-optimism. The article then presents two different approaches which reflect the actual overcoming of the romantic author in the sense of an individual creator in the context of the contemporary information society. The first one (Balve, 2014) refers to the birth of typography, which he describes in relation to the authorship in terms of speculative historical narration, and further he strives to keep this idea in the sense of genuine authorship, while he simultaneously points out its ideological construct. In contrast, the second approach (Sutherland-Smith, 2005) inclines to the overcoming of this idea, because it is no longer valid, and prefers establishing a so-called new order (Myers, 1998), which would simultaneously reflect this shift in the context of the World Wide Web. The author of this article prefers this second approach, because this very concept allows us to liberate the concept of traditional authorship from its obsolescence and to point out its very real overcoming. The text then comes to the second key point, constructed by the previously mentioned media epistemology, and clarifies the author/viewer convergence with the reference to Carpentier and his utopian and dystopian fantasies. Carpentier classifies them into three categories: firstly, into the modernist concept of the cultural professional, who symbolizes a nostalgic effort to keep the obsolete order; secondly, into a still modernist form of the author/viewer convergence, which is dystopian or utopian (produsage); and thirdly, into the postmodern, late-modern or fluid-modern form while he refers to the utopian participatory fantasy (Pateman, 1970) as the most preferred approach. The author of this text ultimately doesn't agree with Carpentier and prefers the concept of produsage as the only type of fantasy which captures the very real overcoming of the sovereign individual romantic author. The author then points out the necessity of liberating the produsage from its modernist utopian ideas and the need to accept the author/viewer convergence in full range (via produsage) and to put it into the context of contemporary
Paragraph, 1988
Barthes: ideology, culture, subjectivity Je n'ai pas du tout une pensée politique, historique ou sociologique. (Roland Barthes) To pose political questions about Barthes's texts is to challenge the above statement.1 It is certainly not to lay claim to an inheritance. Barthes has no legitimate heirs: his work cannot be appropriated in accordance with a Law.2 Nor can the text be placed under the sign of an authorial political commitment expressed and lived outside it. 'Au fond, s'il fallait vous définir, l'étiquette ď "intellectuel de gauche" collerait pour une fois assez bien' (At bottom, if one had to define you, the label of 'left-wing intellectual' would for once fit quite well), suggests an interviewer. Barthes shrugs his shoulders: 'Ce serait à la gauche de dire si elle me comprend parmi ses intellectuels' (It would be for the left to say if it counts me as one of its intellectuals) ; all he will admit to is an obstinately anarchist sensibility.3 Up to the Left, then, to decide what use it can make of Barthes in its political and theoretical projects. The present paper offers no more than suggestions about possible lines to follow. It is not, furthermore, really a question of making use of Barthes. By this I mean two things. The first, with an important qualification that I shall make presently, is that the aim is not to judge Barthes as the moral subject of his ideological positions, although the positions themselves come under scrutiny. Such evaluations can be left to the bourgeois ideology of the ultimate responsibility of the individual subject. 'We know', as Barthes tends to say in his bouts of theoretical euphoria, that the text resists attribution to an individual: it escapes, goes beyond its author. Paradoxically, though, one of the ways in which the text of Barthes escapes its author is precisely in being attributed to him, against its own drift. The economy it enters into is not an authorless one. At one point Barthes wonders if literature is going to regain its medieval status as 'un objet à commentaires, un tuteur d'autres langages' (an object for commentaries, a prop for other languages),4 but this would require an institutional death of the author: the medieval culture that identified 'author' and 'authority' was paradoxically far less author-centred than our own, commenting on pagan, Christian and Moslem authors alike without concern for their individuality. It is a fact-cultural, political and ideological-that modern Western culture consumes texts 'by
… Journal of Qualitative …, 2007
In this paper the authors propose Roland Barthes's analytical method, which appears in his classic work S/Z (1974), as a new way of analyzing personal stories. The five codes that are described in the book are linked to the domains of poetics, language, and culture, and expose facets that are embedded in the deep structure of narratives. These codes are helpful in revealing findings with regard to the development of the professional careers of teacher educators.
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