Results for 'Roland S. Barth'

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  1. School, a community of leaders.Roland S. Barth - 1988 - In Ann Lieberman (ed.), Building a professional culture in schools. New York: Teachers College Press.
  2.  65
    How to Live Together: Novelistic Simulations of Some Everyday Spaces.Roland Barthes - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    In _The Preparation of the Novel_, a collection of lectures delivered at a defining moment in Roland Barthes's career (and completed just weeks before his death), the critic spoke of his struggle to discover a different way of writing and a new approach to life. _The Neutral_ preceded this work, containing Barthes's challenge to the classic oppositions of Western thought and his effort to establish new pathways of meaning. _How to Live Together_ predates both of these achievements, a series (...)
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  3. (1 other version)Barthes, R. (1977). Image, music, text. (S. Heath, Ed.)The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism (Vol. 37, p. 220). Hill and Wang. doi:10.2307/429854Image, music, text. [REVIEW]Roland Barthes - 1977 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 37 (2):235-236.
    Roland Barthes, the French critic and semiotician, was one of the most important critics and essayists of this century. His work continues to influence contemporary literary theory and cultural studies. Image-Music-Text collects Barthes's best writings on photography and the cinema, as well as fascinating articles on the relationship between images and sound. Two of Barthes's most important essays, "Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narrative" and "The Death of the Author" are also included in this fine anthology, an excellent (...)
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  4.  11
    Tessa Boffin: A Lover's Distance.Roland Barthes - 1987 - Feminist Review 25 (1):99-107.
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  5.  64
    The Neutral: Lecture Course at the College de France (1977-1978).Roland Barthes (ed.) - 2005 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    "I define the Neutral as that which outplays the paradigm, or rather I call Neutral everything that baffles paradigm." With these words, Roland Barthes describes a concept that profoundly shaped his work and was the subject of a landmark series of lectures delivered in 1978 at the Collège de France, just two years before his death. Not published in France until 2002, and appearing in English for the first time, these creative and engaging lectures deepen our understanding of (...) Barthes's intellectual itinerary and reveal his distinctive style as thinker and teacher. The Neutral (_le neutre_), as Barthes describes it, escapes or undoes the paradigmatic binary oppositions that structure and produce meaning in Western thought and discourse. These binaries are found in all aspects of human society ranging from language to sexuality to politics. For Barthes, the attempt to deconstruct or escape from these binaries has profound ethical, philosophical, and linguistic implications. _The Neutral_ is comprised of the prewritten texts from which Barthes lectured and centers around 23 "figures," also referred to as "traits" or "twinklings," that are possible embodiments of the Neutral (sleep, silence, tact, etc.) or of the anti-Neutral (anger, arrogance, conflict, etc.). His lectures draw on a diverse set of authors and intellectual traditions, including Lao-tzu, Tolstoy, German mysticism, classical philosophy, Rousseau, Baudelaire, Walter Benjamin, and John Cage. Barthes's idiosyncratic approach to his subjects gives the lectures a playful, personal, and even joyous quality that enhances his rich insights. In addition to his reflections on a variety of literary and scholarly works, Barthes's personal convictions and the events of his life shaped the course and content of the lectures. Most prominently, as Barthes admits, the recent death of his mother and the idea of mourning shape several of his lectures. (shrink)
  6.  13
    'A very fine gift': and other writings on theory.Roland Barthes - 2015 - London: Seagull Books. Edited by Chris Turner & Roland Barthes.
    Roland Barthes, whose centenary falls in 2015, was a restless, protean thinker. A constant innovator, often as a daring smuggler of ideas from one discipline to another, he first gained an audience with his pithy essays on mass culture and then went on to produce some of the most suggestive and stimulating cultural criticism of the late twentieth century, including Empire of Signs, The Pleasure of the Text, and Camera Lucida. In 1976, this one time structuralist outsider was elected (...)
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  7.  24
    The Grain of the Voice: Interviews 1962-1980.Roland Barthes - 1991 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    This book brings together the great majority of Barthes's interviews that originally appeared in French in _Le Figaro Littéraire, Cahiers du Cinéma, France-Observateur, L'Express_, and elsewhere. Barthes replied to questions—on the cinema, on his own works, on fashion, writing, and criticism—in his unique voice; here we have Barthes in conversation, speaking directly, with all his individuality. These interviews provide an insight into the rich, probing intelligence of one of the great and influential minds of our time.
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  8.  6
    Incidents.Roland Barthes & Bishan Samaddar - 1992 - Berkeley: Seagull Books.
    The late French literary and social critic's intimate journal, first published after his death and translated into English here for the first time, and three other autobiographical texts in which he explores his homosexuality are combined in one volume. Original.
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  9.  8
    Primacy of Christ: The Patristic Patrimony in Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI's Analogy in Theology by Vincent C. Anyama (review).Roland Millare - 2024 - Nova et Vetera 22 (1):307-311.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Primacy of Christ: The Patristic Patrimony in Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI's Analogy in Theology by Vincent C. AnyamaRoland MillarePrimacy of Christ: The Patristic Patrimony in Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI's Analogy in Theology by Vincent C. Anyama (Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2021), xii + 263 pp.In the famous dispute between Erich Przywara and Karl Barth, Przywara held the view that the analogy of being is the "formal principle of Catholic thought," (...)
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  10.  87
    The Loving God: Some Observations on John Hick's "Evil and the God of Love".Roland Puccetti - 1967 - Religious Studies 2 (2):255 - 268.
    Philosophers of religion divide neatly into two camps on the problem of evil: those who think it fatal to the concept of a loving God and those who do not. The latter have established a wide array of defensive positions down through the centuries, but none that has proved impregnable to sceptical attack. In his new book Mr Hick wisely abandons these older fortifications and falls back on highly mobile reserves. Not for him the ‘Fall of Man’ thesis, with its (...)
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  11.  11
    (1 other version)Barthes, Roland, modernity within history.William S. Ii Haney - 1989 - Semiotica 74 (3-4):313-328.
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  12.  10
    The Tel Quel Reader.Patrick Ffrench & Roland-François Lack (eds.) - 1998 - Routledge.
    The work of the French literary review, intellectual grouping and publishing team Tel Quel had a profound impact on the formation of literary and cultural debate in the 1960s and 70s. Its legacy has had enormous influence on the parameters of such debate today. From its beginning in 1960 to its closure in 1982, it published some of the earliest work of Jacques Derrida, Julia Kristeva, Michel Foucault and Roland Barthes. It was also associated with some of the key (...)
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  13.  52
    Roland Barthes's Cold-War Cinema.Philip Watts - 2005 - Substance 34 (3):17-32.
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  14.  18
    (Re)constructing social hierarchies: a critical discourse analysis of an international charity’s visual appeals.S. Gellen & R. D. Lowe - 2021 - Critical Discourse Studies 18 (2):280-300.
    A British coffee chain’s fundraising practices constitute a background for this study to examine ideological discourses behind British charitable giving. The charity executes projects in coffee growing communities by providing education for children in disadvantaged neighbourhoods. The study takes a critical stance from a discursive paradigmatic perspective to analyse visual contents used by the charity. The applied visual critical discourse analysis was inspired by Barthes’ semiotic theory. Findings suggest that the adverts’ interpretative repertoires can serve ideologies that sustain the donors’ (...)
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  15. (1 other version)Roland Barthes's myth of photography.Jean-Michel Rabaté - 2022 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Barthes, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  16.  25
    Le S/Z de Roland Barthes: L'Avenir du "Texte"11).Michel Pierssens - 1971 - Substance 1 (1):37.
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  17.  47
    Who's afraid of... Roland Barthes.Martin G. Grisel - 1996 - The European Legacy 1 (4):1490-1495.
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  18.  1
    Roland Barthes’ta Mit ve Burjuva İdeolojisi.Sedat Bingöl - 2024 - Kilikya Felsefe Dergisi / Cilicia Journal of Philosophy 11 (1):33-49.
    Roland Barthes, çağdaş mitlere göstergebilimsel bir çözümleme uygulayarak bu mitlerin esasen ideolojik bir mesaj ya da bildiri içerdiğini ortaya koyar. Modern mitler, gösterdiğinden başka bir şey kast eder; onların gerçek anlamının dışında her zaman ikincil bir anlamı vardır. Bu da mitlerin muğlaklıklar, aldatmacalar, belirsizlikler ve çok anlamlılık içerdiği manasına gelir. Göstergebilimsel analiz, söz konusu aldatmacaların ardında gizlenen amacı görünür hale getirir. Bu amaç da, burjuva sınıfının politik, kültürel, ekonomik ve toplumsal egemenliğini korumak ve devam ettirmektir. Mitlerde ‘doğal’ olarak sunulan (...)
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  19.  32
    Roland Barthes: A Beginner's Guide.Jean-Jacques Thomas & Mireille Ribiere - 2004 - Substance 33 (1):152.
  20.  41
    ‘Préparation du romanesque’ in Roland Barthes's Reading of Sarrasine.Andy Stafford - 2008 - Paragraph 31 (1):95-108.
    By considering S/Z as an early example of the romanesque in Roland Barthes's oeuvre, this article considers the generic and thematic anticipation of La Préparation du roman in Barthes's seminars of the late 1960s. It suggests that his seminar notes on Balzac's Sarrasine written in 1968 and 1969 are a form of proto-essayism, albeit given as seminars in the institutional context of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris. This essayism is traced through the notion of perte de (...)
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  21.  10
    Roland Barthes, ou, L'image advenue.Guillaume Cassegrain - 2015 - Paris: Éditions Hazan.
    Au Roland Barthes critique, celui des analyses litteraires des Essais critiques, du Sur Racine ou des constructions theoriques nourries par la linguistique et le structuralisme comme le Degre zero de l ecriture, S/Z, le Systeme de la mode; au Roland Barthes ecrivain, sachant meler, avec une originalite inimitable, fiction et reflexions analytiques dans le Roland Barthes par Roland Barthes ou les Fragments d un discours amoureux, il faudrait ajouter un Roland Barthes, moins connu et moins (...)
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  22. (1 other version)Point counterpoint : Derrida's "The deaths of Roland Barthes".Brian O'Keeffe - 2022 - In Jeffrey R. Di Leo & Zahi Anbra Zalloua (eds.), Understanding Barthes, understanding modernism. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  23.  35
    A Consideration of Roland Barthes’s The Pleasure of the Text.Jeffrey Dirk Wilson - 2016 - International Philosophical Quarterly 56 (4):469-486.
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  24.  92
    Ribiere, Mireille. Roland Barthes: A Beginner's Guide. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 2002. Pp. 82.J. -J. Thomas & E. Mechoulan - 2004 - Substance 33 (1):152-155.
  25. (1 other version)A lover's reply (to Roland Barthes's a lover's discourse).Robert C. Solomon - 2000 - In Hugh J. Silverman (ed.), Philosophy and Desire. New York: Routledge. pp. 7--143.
     
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  26.  18
    Analyzing Narrative: Roland Barthes’ Forgotten Interview.Jonathan Culler - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (7-8):175-180.
    This commentary reflects upon an interview with Roland Barthes from 1965 in which he discusses the structural analysis of narrative. The presentation prefigures the publication of Barthes’ well-known essay, ‘ Introduction à l’analyse structurale des récits’, which appeared shortly after in Communications, No. 8, in 1966. A close reading of both interview and essay shows that the interview differs from the published essay, notably in following more explicitly the steps of Saussure’s attempts to work out the units of the (...)
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  27.  31
    A Consideration of Roland Barthes’s The Pleasure of the Text in advance.Jeffrey Dirk Wilson - forthcoming - International Philosophical Quarterly.
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  28.  27
    ‘The Paideia of the Greeks’: On the Methodology of Roland Barthes's Comment vivre ensemble1.Thanks to Diana Knight, Miriam Leonard, Anneleen Masschelein, Judith Mossman and Luc Van der Stockt for their help and advice during the writing process of this text.Maarten de Pourcq - 2008 - Paragraph 31 (1):23-37.
    When Barthes starts to conceptualize his courses at the Collège de France, he envisions a methodology which he actually considers to be an ‘anti-method’, that is to say, an ‘unscientific’ method which goes against the grain of traditional education. He pursues the method of his seminars at the École Pratique des Hautes Etudes, especially the seminar that ended up with the publication of A Lover's Discourse. In the conclusion to the seminar, Barthes turns to Nietzsche to ground this ‘anti-method’ and (...)
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  29.  21
    How to Become What One Is: Roland Barthes's Final Fantasy.Kris Pint - 2008 - Paragraph 31 (1):38-49.
    In his inaugural lecture at the Collège de France, Barthes introduced the fantasy as an important epistemological tool for the reading strategy he would try to develop in his lecture courses. The notion of fantasy oscillates between two important, but apparently irreconcilable intertexts: Lacanian psychoanalysis and Nietzschean philosophy. True to his desire for the Neutral, Barthes refused to choose between them and instead searched for a third term which would outplay the opposition. I argue that Barthes finally found this term (...)
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  30.  19
    The Art of Not Being Sexed Quite So Much: A Feminist Reading of Roland Barthes.Lila Braunschweig - 2024 - Political Theory 52 (2):180-209.
    This article offers an underexplored resistance strategy to gender norms, based on a feminist and queer reading of the work of French thinker Roland Barthes. Building on Barthes’s peculiar conception of what he calls “the Neutral” and revisiting his work in light of feminist and queer scholarship on sexual (in)difference, my main goal is to reshape our understanding of what it means to be gender neutral. In opposition to classical conceptions of neutrality associated with passivity, indifference, and blandness, I (...)
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  31. The Perverse Footnote: Roland Barthes's The Pleasure of the Text and the Politics of Paratextuality.Alex Watson - 2021 - In Fabien Arribert-Narce, Fuhito Endō & Kamila Pawlikowska (eds.), The pleasure in/of the text: about the joys and perversities of reading. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  32.  20
    Atonality and Tonality: Musical Analogies in Roland Barthes's Lectures at the Collège de France.Lucy O'meara - 2008 - Paragraph 31 (1):9-22.
    Though explicit references to music are infrequent in Barthes's Collège de France lectures, Barthes's use of music in other work from the 1970s makes it clear that music can act as a fruitful analogy in consideration of the text. This article uses the serialist or atonal analogy, as set up by Barthes in ‘From Work to Text’ and elsewhere, to examine the structuring of Comment vivre ensemble and The Neutral. In viewing these courses as serial or open works we can, (...)
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  33.  79
    Photography Degree Zero: Reflections on Roland Barthes's Camera Lucida.Geoffrey Batchen (ed.) - 2011 - MIT Press.
    An essential guide to an essential book, this first anthology on Camera Lucida offers critical perspectives on Barthes's influential text. Roland Barthes's 1980 book Camera Lucida is perhaps the most influential book ever published on photography. The terms studium and punctum, coined by Barthes for two different ways of responding to photographs, are part of the standard lexicon for discussions of photography; Barthes's understanding of photographic time and the relationship he forges between photography and death have been invoked countless (...)
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  34.  17
    Neutral Life: Roland Barthes’ Late Work – An Introduction.Sunil Manghani - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (4):3-34.
    As the introduction and lead article for a special issue of Theory, Culture & Society, ‘Neutral Life/Late Barthes’, this article offers an overview of the ‘new’ Barthes that emerges from the late writings and recent ‘Barthes Studies’. The account centres upon the posthumous publication of Barthes’ three key lecture courses delivered at the Collège de France, at the end of the 1970s, which reflect his preoccupation with the everyday, yet reveal a new degree of sophistication, both formal and conceptual. Presented (...)
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  35.  6
    The Philosopher's Touch: Sartre, Nietzsche, and Barthes at the Piano.Brian Reilly (ed.) - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    Renowned philosopher and prominent French critic François Noudelmann engages the musicality of Jean-Paul Sartre, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Roland Barthes, all of whom were amateur piano players and acute lovers of the medium. Though piano playing was a crucial art for these thinkers, their musings on the subject are largely scant, implicit, or discordant with each philosopher's oeuvre. Noudelmann both recovers and integrates these perspectives, showing that the manner in which these philosophers played, the composers they adored, and the music (...)
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  36. Barthes’s positive theory of the author.Harri Veivo - 2008 - Sign Systems Studies 36 (1):31-47.
    While it is well known that Roland Barthes consecrated his last lecture series at the Collège de France to the theme of the preparation of a novel, it is less known that his first writings on literature focused on the same question, but from a less individual point of view. The interrogation that motivates Le Degré zéro de l’écriture (1953) and many of the essays in Essais critiques (1964) is the question of how to write, of what procedures one (...)
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  37.  19
    Barthes, Beckett and the Theatre: Three Dialogues.Anna McMullan - 2022 - Paragraph 45 (2):172-186.
    Although Roland Barthes never wrote a play, ‘theatre’ or related terms such as ‘scenario’ or ‘theatricality’ recur throughout his oeuvre from the 1950s to the late 1970s. He wrote many reviews of theatre, but theatre and performance also became integral to much of the theoretical concerns of his later work. During this same period, Samuel Beckett’s dramaturgy was evolving from his first full-length play, Eleutheria, to the later ‘dramaticules’ such as Not I, which premiered in 1973. Barthes did comment (...)
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  38.  30
    ‘The Dream of a Minimal Sociality’: Roland Barthes' Skeptic Intensity.Rudolphus Teeuwen - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (4):119-134.
    The notion of épochè, ‘suspension’, as developed by the Greek Skeptics, refers to the suspension of judgment that makes one neither affirm nor deny anything. In The Neutral, Roland Barthes takes this suspension as an ethical principle. Whereas discursive logic fosters the making of clear choices between alternative positions on something formulated as an issue, Barthes' suspension of judgment counteracts this push toward taking up positions. Barthes' term for this refusal to judge is ‘the Neutral’, which manifests itself in (...)
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  39.  57
    A Great "Pedagogy" of Nuance: Roland Barthes's The Neutral.Nicholas De Villiers - 2005 - Theory and Event 8 (4).
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  40.  45
    The Persistence of Utopia: Plasticity and Difference from Roland Barthes to Catherine Malabou.Jennifer A. Wagner-Lawlor - 2017 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 25 (2):67-86.
    The theorizing of utopia is a persistent theme throughout several generations of the French continental tradition, and alongside the process theory of Alfred North Whitehead to a large degree recuperates the concept of utopia from its supposed dismissal by Marx and his intellectual descendants. Most recently, attention to the notion of plasticity, popularized by Catherine Malabou, extends speculation on utopian possibility. Compelled to answer to Marx’s denigration of utopia as fantasy, the tendency was to compensate for the absence of a (...)
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  41.  14
    The Philosopher's Touch: Sartre, Nietzsche, and Barthes at the Piano.Francois Noudelmann - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    Renowned philosopher and prominent French critic François Noudelmann engages the musicality of Jean-Paul Sartre, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Roland Barthes, all of whom were amateur piano players and acute lovers of the medium. Though piano playing was a crucial art for these thinkers, their musings on the subject are largely scant, implicit, or discordant with each philosopher's oeuvre. Noudelmann both recovers and integrates these perspectives, showing that the manner in which these philosophers played, the composers they adored, and the music (...)
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  42.  47
    Responsible Politics of the Neutral: Rethinking International Humanitarianism in the Red Cross Movement via the Philosophy of Roland Barthes.Mark Fn Franke - 2010 - Journal of International Political Theory 6 (2):142-160.
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) offers a dilemma for international political theory. ICRC's success as a humanitarian actor in international conflict is credited to its neutral stance. However, ICRC neutrality is vulnerable to serious challenges regarding its supposed avoidance of the political. ICRC neutrality is commonly dismissed as either illusory or impossible. The problem is not grounded in the principle of neutrality itself, though, but rather in the lack of critical engagement with what it means to be (...)
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  43.  10
    Apprendre et désapprendre: les séminaires de Roland Barthes (1962-1977).Claudia Amigo Pino - 2022 - Louvain-la-Neuve: Académia.
    Roland Barthes, figure intellectuelle marquante du XXe siècle, est connu à travers l'oeuvre qu'il a laissée derrière lui, avec la profusion d'idées, d'objets d'études, de partis-pris théoriques même, qui ont jalonné sa vie de penseur et d'écrivain. Mais on sait moins aujourd'hui que Barthes fut un professeur attaché à la parole et à l'écoute, à la proposition et à la discussion. C'est à cette activité d'enseignant que s'attache le présent livre."--Page 4 of cover.
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  44.  36
    Photographic ambivalence and historical consciousness.Michael S. Roth - 2009 - History and Theory 48 (4):82-94.
    This essay focuses on three topics that arose at the Photography and Historical Interpretation conference: photography’s incapacity to conceive duration; photography and the “rim of ontological uncertainty;” photography’s “anthropological revolution.” In the late nineteenth century, blindness to duration was conceptualized as the cost of photographic precision. Since the late twentieth century, blindness to our own desires, or inauthenticity, has been underlined as the price of photographic ubiquity. These forms of blindness, however, are not so much disabilities to be overcome as (...)
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  45.  23
    Anathematizing Barthes and Admiring Beckett with Eugène Ionesco.Arleen Ionescu - 2022 - Paragraph 45 (2):187-202.
    This article explores the world of theatre from within and beyond the stage and brings together Roland Barthes as a critic and Samuel Beckett as a playwright via a third character, the Romanian-born playwright Eugène Ionesco, who anathematized the former and admired the latter. The article starts from Martin Esslin’s The Theatre of the Absurd (1961), which defined Beckett’s and Ionesco’s art, pointing out that whilst Esslin showed why their works produced ‘bewilderment’ in England and the US, he ignored (...)
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  46.  89
    Scheie, Timothy. Performance Degree Zero: Roland Barthes and the Theatre. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2006. Pp. 225. [REVIEW]M. Chrulew, C. Danta & T. J. Armbrecht - 2014 - Substance 43 (2):207-211.
    Timothy Scheie’s book on the importance of the theatre in Roland Barthes’ oeuvre begins with what Scheie poses as an enigma: Barthes wrote frequently of the theatre at the beginning of his career and then ceased to do so, without comment, after 1960. Scheie argues that Barthes’ abandonment of the theatre reveals something important about the development of his thoughts and even about his life. Scheie also considers Barthes’ early theatrical criticism and later use of theatrical metaphors to be (...)
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  47.  16
    Beckett, Barthes and Breath.Arthur Rose - 2022 - Paragraph 45 (2):218-232.
    This essay develops a tense relation between Samuel Beckett and Roland Barthes over their treatment of breath. If Barthes’s lovers come together through a shared breath, breaths pull Beckett’s couples apart. How then might breath bring Beckett and Barthes together, so they might be close but not too close? The essay first discards the idea of using a single understanding of breath by showing how the localized instances of breath in Beckett and Barthes do not scale up to a (...)
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  48.  23
    ‘Except When Night Falls’: Together and Alone in Barthes's Comment vivre ensemble.Diana Knight - 2008 - Paragraph 31 (1):50-62.
    This essay explores the relation between Living-Together and Living-Alone by analysing the overlap between two figures sketched out in Comment vivre ensemble: Autarky and Enclosure. Barthes's ambivalence towards enclosure and self-sufficiency — ideologically negative, existentially and neurotically positive — is traced backwards through a number of 1950s essays to his 1947 proto-mythology Esquisse d’une société sanatoriale. On the basis of Barthes's analysis there of the excessive socialization that serves to repress the reality of illness and death, I move forward again (...)
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  49.  24
    Some properties of maximal sets.Roland S. H. Omanadze & Irakli O. Chitaia - 2015 - Logic Journal of the IGPL 23 (4):628-639.
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  50. ›Une sorte de remontée vers le corps‹. Skizze einer Ästhetik der körperlichen Responsivität im Ausgang von Roland Barthes’ Überlegungen zur Pseudo-Schrift.Schwerzmann Katia - 2014 - Kodikas/Code. Ars Semeiotica 37 (3/4):249-260.
    The sensory dimension of writing, which is never fully neutralised in the process of semiosis, remains aporetic in Derrida’s philosophy. I show how Barthes’ observations on pseudo-writing lead to his understanding of writing as a gesture, opening up post-structuralism to the body as absolutely non-repeatable, as the opposite of semiosis. The examination of Barthes’ account of the relationship between writing and the body leads to an aesthetic of physical responsiveness, which challenges the distinction between work, creator and viewer. In this (...)
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