Seminar 5 - Post-Structuralism, Deconstruction and Post-Modernism - Questions

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  • 7/28/2019 Seminar 5 - Post-Structuralism, Deconstruction and Post-Modernism - Questions

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    Advanced Literary Theory

    Seminar 5: Post-Structuralism, Deconstruction, and Post-Modernism

    For our seminar on poststructuralism, there are a lot of texts that you could read. I know that

    many of them are difficult to read, but try to grasp what you see as the main idea in each. Andthen we can see how they could be applied to the primary texts. In addition to the excerpts

    below, I also suggest that you read the short introductions to the other theoretical texts in the

    anthology to get an idea what they are about. You are, of course, welcome to read any of the

    other theorists that you might want to learn more about, especially if you think they are useful

    for your degree thesis:

    THEORY

    FromLiterary Theory: A Practical Introduction, 2nd ed:

    Post-Structuralism, Deconstruction, Post-Modernism (pp.62-70)FromLiterary Theory: An Anthology, 2nd ed:

    Introduction: Introductory Deconstruction (pp. 257-61) Jacques Derrida, Diffrance (pp. 278-99) Barbara Johnson, Writing (pp. 340-47) Jean-Francois Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition (pp. 355-64) Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation (pp. 365-77)

    Questions1. What was it in the philosophical tradition of Edmund Husserl that Derrida objected to?

    How did Derrida develop Saussures idea of language meaning being based ondifference? What did he mean by Husserls tradition of philosophy being teleological,

    metaphysical and logocentric? Why has speech been favoured over writing in

    metaphysical philosophy, according to Derrida? Try to give examples that illustrate

    Ryans summary of Derridas philosophy: Metaphysics claims that difference arises

    from identity, but in fact difference generates identity (LTPI69).

    2. Try to explain Derridas concept ofdiffrance. In what way is it a development fromSaussures concept of the diacritical nature of the linguistic sign, according to which

    the identity of a sign is constituted by its differences form other signs (LTA 258). In

    what way are signifieds in themselves differential, that is, signifiers themselves? How

    did Derridas questioning of an original presence of truth (a transcendentalsignified) clash with the New Critics claim that poetry embodies ideas that are

    universal?

    3. In what way is diffrance different from difference, according to Derrida? How do youinterpret Derridas use of the word assemblage instead of word or concept to describe

    his neologism (=new word)? (280). Why does diffranceprove Derridas claim that

    writing is much better than speech to describe our human world? In what way is the

    subject a function of the language? (289). What is the difference between

    semiology and grammatology according to Derrida? (289). Look at what Derrida says

    about the speaking or signifying subject on page 289. How do we become speaking

    subjects? How is this theory of the subject different from Husserls metaphysical idea

    of consciousness? In what way did Freud and Nietzsche also question the self-

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    assured certitude of consciousness [] by starting out with the theme of difference?

    (290).

    4. Some people criticize Derridas theory of deconstruction for being too relativistic inits questioning of transcendent and absolute truth, claiming that it is a new kind of

    nihilism that is too abstract and theoretical to have any bearing on our every-day life.But on page 294 Derrida himself, in a much quoted paragraph, admits that

    To think through the ontological difference doubtless remains a difficult task, a

    task whose statement has remained nearly inaudible. And to prepare ourselves

    for venturing beyond out own logos, that is, for a diffrance so violent that it

    refuses to be stopped and examined as the epochality of Being and ontological

    difference, is neither to give up this passage through the truth of Being, nor is it

    in any way to criticize, contest, or fail to recognize the incessant necessity

    for it. On the contrary, we must stay within the difficulty of this passage; we

    must repeat this passage in a rigorous reading of metaphysics, wherever

    metaphysics serves as the norm of Western speech, and not only in the texts ofthe history of philosophy. Here we must allow the trace of whatever goes

    beyond the truth of Being to appear/disappear in its fully rigorous way. It is a

    trace of something that can never present itself; it is itself a trace that can never

    be presented, that is, can never appear and manifest itself as such in its

    phenomenon. In is a trace that lies beyond what profoundly ties fundamental

    ontology to phenomenology. Like diffrance, the trace is never presented as

    such. In presenting itself it becomes effaced; in being sounded it dies away, like

    the writing of the a, inscribing its pyramid in difference.

    In your understanding, what is it Derrida is calling for here? What does he mean by

    stating that Heidegger provokes us to question the essence of the present, the

    presence of the present?

    5. Barbara Johnson writes about the sudden spectacular interest in writing that eruptedin France in the late 60s. What were some of its sources? (LTA 341-43). Explain

    Barthess new way of looking at literature as text instead of work. How can the

    privileging of the signified resemble the fetishization of commodities resulting from

    bourgeois idealism? (342). What did Lacan mean by stressing that the unconscious

    is structured like a language and that there is no one-to-one link between signifier and

    signified but rather an effect of signified generated by the movement from one

    signifier to another?

    6. Do you understand her interpretation of Edward Taylors poem? In what way is it anexample of Derridas logic of thesupplment? Do you agree with the argument that

    writing gives rise to more multiple readings than speech? Can you give examples? In

    what way can a Derridian reading of a text take seriously the elements that a standard

    reading disregards, overlooks, or edits out? How can it be true that When one writes,

    one writes more that (or less than, or other than) one thinks? In what way has

    Derridas deconstruction of logocentric texts of the west been influential for feminist

    and postcolonial criticism?

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    7. Summarize the main ideas and arguments in Lyotards and Baudrillards texts. Whatare their respective key concepts and how can they be applied in textual analysis?

    How are their ideas similar or different from those of Derrida?

    8. What does Baudrillard mean with the hyperrealand the precession of simulacra? The age of simulation thus begins with a liquidation or all referentials. It is no

    longer a question of imitation, nor of reduplication nor even of parody. It is rather a

    question of substituting sighs of the real for the real itself (366).

    What is the difference between simulation and feigning/pretending? (366). Why doessimulation threaten the difference between true and false, between real and

    imaginary?

    According to Baudrillard: When the real is no longer what it used to be, n ostalgiaassumes its full meaning. There is a proliferation of myths of origin and signs of

    reality; of second-hand truth, objectivity and authenticity. There is an escalation of the

    true, or the lived experience; a resurrection of the figurative where the object and

    substance have disappeared (369). Give examples of this nostalgia in contemporaryculture.

    In what way is Disneyland there to conceal the fact that it is the real country, all ofreal America, which is Disneyland (369)?

    In what way did the Watergate scandal and the Washington Post journalists regeneratepublic morality and thus further the order of capital? In what way is it similar in

    function to Watergate?

    Like Moebiuss spiral, there is no order in the political-social field; the whole systemor order from left to right is simulated. This logic of simulation has nothing to do with

    a logic of facts and an order of reasons. Simulation is characterized by a precession of

    the model - the models come first, and their orbital circulation constitutes thegenuine magnetic field of events. Thus we can each time a bomb goes off have all

    possible interpretations all are true, in the sense that their truth is exchangeable

    (371-2). Give examples.

    Operational negativity: proving the real by the imaginary: proving truth by scandal;proving the law by transgression; proving work by the strike; proving the system by

    crisis and capital by revolution etc. (372).

    Why can transgression and violence be less serious a threat to power thansimulation?

    According to Baudrillard, it is now impossible to isolate the process of the real (373)which means that there is no difference between the impact of real events and

    simulated events. Give examples of simulated events that are taken as real. (WMD inIraq, for example?)

    THEORY IN PRACTICE

    Do a poststructuralist reading ofKing Lear according to Ryans suggestions inLTPI(70-81). Do you find Ryans reading convincing, or is he going too far?

    Do a poststructuralist reading of Elisabeth Bishops Over2,000 Illustrations and aComplete Concordance according to Ryans suggestions. You are of course free

    to present your own interpretation and to disagree with Ryan.

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    Do a poststructuralist reading ofThe Bluest Eye. Here you may use the suggestionsmade by Ryan in the first edition ofLTPI(on Fronter).