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Writing Scenes and the Scene of Writing: A Postscript

Campe, Rüdiger

MLN, 2021-12, Vol.136 (5), p.1114-1133 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

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  • Título:
    Writing Scenes and the Scene of Writing: A Postscript
  • Autor: Campe, Rüdiger
  • Assuntos: Anthropology ; Authorship ; Barthes, Roland (1915-1980) ; Derrida, Jacques ; Foucault, Michel ; Literary criticism ; Literary studies ; Philology ; Philosophers ; Writing instruction
  • É parte de: MLN, 2021-12, Vol.136 (5), p.1114-1133
  • Descrição: When, beginning in the nineteen sixties, 'writing' became an attractive concept and was for a while, at least, almost ubiquitous, the notion was either critical of certain assumptions in traditional literary criticism or it was not oriented toward literature at all. Instead, it was often related to philosophy, science or the fabric of society at large. The concept of writing was critical of traditional literary criticism insofar as it aligned with the death of the author. Roland Barthes's name is indelibly linked to this claim. The philosophical endeavor was led by Jacques Derrida, and it emerged from his work on Husserl's Logical Investigations first and then the Crisis of the European Sciences (Writing and Difference). A few years later, Michel Foucault reintroduced the author into the theorists' dictionary, but the author reappeared under the name of a "function" as Foucault would say.
  • Editor: Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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