Structuralism and Since: From Lévi Strauss to DerridaJohn Sturrock This book considers the work of five French thinkers closely associated with structuralism, and offers a reasoned and positive presentation of an important body of contemporary thought. |
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Page 82
... Foucault's discourse . It is all surface - and intended to be so . For even more consistently than Nietzsche , Foucault resists the impulse to seek an origin or transcendental subject which would confer any specific ' meaning ' on human ...
... Foucault's discourse . It is all surface - and intended to be so . For even more consistently than Nietzsche , Foucault resists the impulse to seek an origin or transcendental subject which would confer any specific ' meaning ' on human ...
Page 84
... discourse ' is trying to operate a decentring that leaves no privilege to any centre ... it does not set out to be a ... Foucault's view . And he ends The Archaeology of Knowledge with a negative definition of his central object of study in ...
... discourse ' is trying to operate a decentring that leaves no privilege to any centre ... it does not set out to be a ... Foucault's view . And he ends The Archaeology of Knowledge with a negative definition of his central object of study in ...
Page 87
... discourse's capacity to hide its origin in a play of signifiers which are their own signifieds . It is the mode of this play that constitutes the ... discourse appears increasingly in Foucault's own works as a way of Michel Foucault 87.
... discourse's capacity to hide its origin in a play of signifiers which are their own signifieds . It is the mode of this play that constitutes the ... discourse appears increasingly in Foucault's own works as a way of Michel Foucault 87.
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Claude LéviStrauss by Dan Sperber | 19 |
Roland Barthes by John Sturrock | 52 |
Copyright | |
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analysis appear argues argument authority Barthes Barthes's become body calls century claim communication concepts concerned considered consists constituted course criticism cultural Derrida desire determined discipline discourse discussion distinction elements English essay example existence fact figures follow Foucault French Freud function further give given hand human ideas identified important individual intellectual interpretation kind kinship knowledge Lacan language less Lévi-Strauss limits linguistic literary literature live madness Marxism meaning mind mode myths nature never notion object once original paradox Paris particular philosophy play positive possible practice present principle produced psychoanalysis question reader reading refer relation relationship represent reveal rhetorical rules Saussure sciences seems sense sexuality signifier social society speak speech structuralist structure style symbolic theory things thinking thought tion translation truth turn unconscious universal writing