Title: Post-Structuralism%20
1Post-Structuralism Postmodern Texts (3)
- Post-Structuralism Defined Marxism vs.
Post-Structuralism - Fiction and Reality Examples 1 context into
text, 2 life//story-telling , 3 parody 4. Other
kinds of fiction - Deconstruction
- Subject and Power
2Post-Structuralism Defined (review)
- post-structuralism as an anti-foundationalist
mode of thinking prevalent in the second half of
the 20th c. - Foundations
- Reality Representation
- Man Subject
- Truth History God, . . ., any kind of
Totalization and Center. Différance and
Discourse
3Poststructuralism Major Concerns
- Realist Representation e.g.
metafiction and Deconstruction - Transcendent Knowledge and Subject
Textualization of Self and Society e.g.
Foucault - Truth is provisional regime of truth.
- Subjects are fragmentary (positions).
- Society is a network of discourses.
4Discourse and Power Major concepts
- From Language to Discourse
- Nothing outside of Discourse?
- 2. Power and Knowledge (Truth)
- 3. Subject and Subject Position
- 4. Influences on Literary Criticism
5From Language to Discourse
- Saussure Barthes Derrida Foucault
Language Or Langue/ Parole Semiotics-wider fields of languages Textual Play, Open text, Meaning undecidable and fluid History Social practices texts discourse
Meaning and Signification Scientific (text, but not subject) Meaning and Signification Scientific (text, but not subject) Signification traces Knowledge power Subject position
6Discourse Definition and Example
- P. 26
- Statements
- Rules about the sayable and thinkable
- Subjects
- Romanticism Discourse
- The Poet with unique imagination close to
nature, etc. - Emotion over Reason Nature over Science.
- The Poet The peasants
7Discourse Definition and Example
- P. 26 27
- Authority of knowledge, and exclusion of other
statements - Practices within institutions
- Historicized discursive formation
- Romanticism Discourse
- The forming of Romantic poetry as the canon.
- Literary reviews, letters, prefaces
- Contributing historical factors industrial rev.
french rev. emergence, dominance and then
decline of Romantic poetry.
8Literary Discourse implications
- No fixed boundaries between literature and other
social practices - The author is not the creator of his work. He
serves as a label to put on a group of works
related to him. (e.g. Wordsworth discourse) - Defining some subject positions (of the author,
the reader, etc.)
9From Language to Discourse
Structuralism Focuses on language and fixed structure Foucault Language (statements) as well as social practices
Marxism Materialist view of history and society -- scientific Foucault p. 48 --not limited to class --every knowledge is contigent.
10Discourse and Truth
- Which of the following is an objective and
unchangeable fact? - Madness is a mental illness.
- Masturbation causes sexual impotence.
- ?????????????.
- sodomy gay homosexual queer ??
- What is the regime of truth which make these
statements valid?
11Power and Knowledge
- power
- both repressive, controlling and productive
- -- not just top-down it circulates, working in
multiple direction like capillary movement. - e.g. the operation of power in a hospital
exertion of power through spatial arrangement,
the doctors examination, the posters, pamphlets,
the different examination room, registration
system, pharmacy, insurance co., etc.
12Subject and Subject Position
- p. 55 56
- Two ideas of subject 1. Conscious autonomous
subject - 2. Subject to someone elses control.
- Foucault 1. Constituted by a discourse to
represent it (hysteric woman) 2. Subject
positions.
13Subject and Subject Position Victorian
Women--Hysteria
14Subject and Subject Position Victorian
Women--Hysteria
15Subject and Subject Position Victorian
WomenPre-Raphaelite Women
- Elizabeth Siddal
- http//www.eng.fju.edu.tw/crit.97/PRwomen/final.ht
m
16Subject and Subject Position Victorian
WomenPre-Raphaelite Women
- Fanny Cornforth
- http//www.eng.fju.edu.tw/crit.97/PRwomen/final.ht
m