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The Three Paradoxes of Roland Barthes
Paperback

The Three Paradoxes of Roland Barthes

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Revolution must of necessity borrow, from what it wants to destroy, the very image of what it wants to possess. - Roland Barthes

In the field of contemporary literary studies, Roland Barthes remains an inestimably influential figure-perhaps more influential in America than in his native France. The Three Paradoxes of Roland Barthes proposes a new method of viewing Barthes’s critical enterprise. Patrizia Lombardo, who studied with Barthes, rejects an absolutist or developmental assessment of his career. Insisting that his world can best be understood in terms of the paradoxes he perceived in the very activity of writing, Lombardo similarly sees in Barthes the crucial ambiguity that determines the modern writer-an irresistible attraction for something new, different, breaking with the past, yet also an unavoidable scorn for the contemporary world. Lombardo demonstrates that her mentor’s critical endeavor was not a linear progression of thought but was, as Barthes described his work, a romance, a ‘dance with a pen.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
University of Georgia Press
Country
United States
Date
1 March 2010
Pages
184
ISBN
9780820334936

Revolution must of necessity borrow, from what it wants to destroy, the very image of what it wants to possess. - Roland Barthes

In the field of contemporary literary studies, Roland Barthes remains an inestimably influential figure-perhaps more influential in America than in his native France. The Three Paradoxes of Roland Barthes proposes a new method of viewing Barthes’s critical enterprise. Patrizia Lombardo, who studied with Barthes, rejects an absolutist or developmental assessment of his career. Insisting that his world can best be understood in terms of the paradoxes he perceived in the very activity of writing, Lombardo similarly sees in Barthes the crucial ambiguity that determines the modern writer-an irresistible attraction for something new, different, breaking with the past, yet also an unavoidable scorn for the contemporary world. Lombardo demonstrates that her mentor’s critical endeavor was not a linear progression of thought but was, as Barthes described his work, a romance, a ‘dance with a pen.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
University of Georgia Press
Country
United States
Date
1 March 2010
Pages
184
ISBN
9780820334936