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A lover's discourse:

fragments
Front Cover
25 Reviews
Penguin, 1990 - Fiction - 234 pages

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Review: A Lover's Discourse: Fragments

User Review - Goodreads

Originally posted here. description Admittedly, this is the kind of book that I will quickly chuck for its verbosity. I've always thought books like this – those that use hemorrhagic and florid words ...

Review: A Lover's Discourse: Fragments

User Review  - Mark Folse - Goodreads

Roland Barthes is Miller Heavy, everything you don't want in a French intellectual author only more, but I find I can't stop reading A Lover's Discourse. Is it my own nature to be smitten by ... Read full review

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Contents

The necessity
1
sabimer to be engulfed
10
adorable adorable
18
Copyright

13 other sections not shown

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References to this book

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The Detraditionalization of Intimacy Reconsidered
Neil Gross - 2005 - Sociological Theory
Love®: a critical reading of Lovemarks
Janet Sayers, Nanette Monin - Journal of Organizational Change Management
Writing the Third-Sophistic Cyborg: Periphrasis on an [In] Tense ...
Michelle Ballif - 1998 - Rhetoric Society Quarterly
The Failures of the Romance: Boredom, Class, and Desire in George ...
Lise Shapiro Sanders - 2001 - MFS Modern Fiction Studies
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About the author (1990)

Roland Barthes (1915-1980), a French critic and intellectual, was a seminal figure in late twentieth-century literary criticism. Barthes's primary theory is that language is not simply words, but a series of indicators of a given society's assumptions. He derived his critical method from structuralism, which studies the rules behind language, and semiotics, which analyzes culture through signs and holds that meaning results from social conventions. Barthes believed that such techniques permit the reader to participate in the work of art under study, rather than merely react to it. Barthes's first books, Writing Degree Zero (1953), and Mythologies (1957), introduced his ideas to a European audience. During the 1960s his work began to appear in the United States in translation and became a strong influence on a generation of American literary critics and theorists. Other important works by Barthes are Elements of Semiology (1968), Critical Essays (1972), The Pleasure of the Text (1973), and The Empire of Signs (1982). The Barthes Reader (1983), edited by Susan Sontag, contains a wide selection of the critic's work in English translation.

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