Friday, November 12, 2004

An excuse for delighting in the pleasures of (the) text

Today is Roland Barthes' birthday. To celebrate, cozy up with a book and a glass of wine by the fire for a little jouissance.

Wikipedia, of course, has more important things to do than note the ironic deaths of its subjects, so I'll take on that job here: Roland Barthes, that master semiotician and crucial figure straddling the boundary between structuralism and poststructuralism, was killed by a car when he crossed against the light at an intersection. The context of a sign is indeed crucial in determining its meaning.

2 comments:

jennifer said...

How very witty of you. This made me laugh, especially after having sat through one too many lessons of 'semiotics!' peace!

John B. said...

I remember that feeling well from sitting in one of my first classes at Rice, on subject-formation theory in American literature.
I DO like Barthes, but I find it's fun to poke occasional fun at one's intellectual heroes. "Fun," here, includes my head-scratching as I ponder the way he died.