Literature and the Touch of the RealUniversity of Delaware Press, 2004 - 262 pàgines Literature and the Touch of the Real offers a critique of neo-Saussurean theories of the constitution of the world through language or the essential divorce of language from the real. It does this by, first, offering a critical account of the contradictions and omissions of Saussure's Course in General Linguistics. Secondly, in a revisionist reading of Jacques Derrida, it argues that far from reducing reality to language, Derrida's concept of the text in fact argues that the world cannot be eradicated from the linguistic. Thirdly, it offers an account of Ludwig Wittgenstein's concepts of grammar, criteria, aspect perception, and language-games that reintegrates language and the world while avoiding the instrumentalist pitfalls of realism and empiricism. |
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Pàgina 32
... things in the world , is either reduced or excluded , then the definition of this object as “ thing ” cannot be purely internal to la langue . If it were , we would remain at the level of words , forever condemned to the “ error ” of ...
... things in the world , is either reduced or excluded , then the definition of this object as “ thing ” cannot be purely internal to la langue . If it were , we would remain at the level of words , forever condemned to the “ error ” of ...
Pàgina 35
... things , and ( 2 ) that it is not ideas that exist independently of words but rather things that do so . The nomenclaturist who held ( 2 ) would slip through the gap created by the absence of any relation between Saussure's first ...
... things , and ( 2 ) that it is not ideas that exist independently of words but rather things that do so . The nomenclaturist who held ( 2 ) would slip through the gap created by the absence of any relation between Saussure's first ...
Pàgina 88
... things , but none of these can be " a unique and singular reality ” unmarked by differential relations . To say that " the thing itself is a sign " or " there never was any ' perception " " is therefore not to reduce things to signs ...
... things , but none of these can be " a unique and singular reality ” unmarked by differential relations . To say that " the thing itself is a sign " or " there never was any ' perception " " is therefore not to reduce things to signs ...
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analysis apartheid arbitrariness argues argument aspect Austin Blackwell Cambridge causal chapter claim concept condition consciousness constituted context criteria criticism cultural deconstruction Derridean determined differential discourse distinction emphasis added essay essence exist expression fact fiction G. E. M. Anscombe G. H. von Wright Geertz grammar Grammatology guage Hamlet historical Historicism Husserl idea ideal Jacques Derrida kind language language-games langue linguistic literary theory literature logical London Ludwig Wittgenstein material meaning merely metaphysical mime mimesis nature neo-Saussurean notion object Oxford phenomenological Philosophical Investigations play players political possibility practice present problem proper name pure Purgatory question racism reality reduced reference relation relationship representation Romeo Routledge rule Saussure Saussure's Saussurean sense Shakespeare signifier and signified singular social speech acts Speech and Phenomena stage Stephen Greenblatt structure substitution theater Thibault things tion tradition trans University Press Weimann Winter's Tale Wittgensteinian word writing