Notes on Structuralism

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 Notes on Structuralism [from Literary Theory,Literary Theory, An Introduction by T erry Eagleton; pages 70-0! "orthrop #rye$ Literature itself had a system that %as created through ob&ecti'e la%s throughout history (modes, myth and genres)* The four narrati'e categories of literature %ere +comic, romantic, tragic and ironic, coinciding %ith the seasons, and by identifying the literary categories, %e can identify literary modes for e.ample, the hero is totally superior to others in the myth, in the romantic he is superior in degree* T o analyse literature fully, %e must e.pel hi story from it and analyse it using literary history only * Literature is as religion* /tructuralism is obsessed %ith structures and the la%s that go'ern structures* Indi'idual %ors become mere instances of a la% or la%s, and the meaning of one %or depends upon i ts indi'idual units and the relationships bet%een them for e.ample, an image of a sun and a moon in a poem is a structure, but structuralists belie'e that the meaning of one depends upon its relation to the other * Their meaning is relational, and thus all you need to no% to infer meaning is found %ithin the %or* This also means that, as long as the relationships bet%een the elements remain unchanged e'en if the elements are changed then the story %ill remain the same* The indi'idual items themsel'es ha'e no special symbolism or meaning* /tructuralism is analytical, indi1erent to cultural 'alue and goes deeper than face 'alue to analyse the structure of a te.t* Ferdinand de Saussure$ Language as a system of signs that should be studied as a complete system at a gi'en point in time, and not diachronically, i*e* in its historical de'elopment* Each sign %as made up of a signi2er (a sound or %ord) and a signi2ed (the image3concept)* E.$ c-a-t the %ritten is the signi2er %hile the signi2ed is +cat, %hat the letters spell out* The relationship bet%een them is arbitrary* This is also true for the %hole %ord +cat and %hat it refers to, the actual animal (the referent)* Each %ord, thus, has meaning only because it is di1erent to others cats meaning e.ists in the fact that it is not cap, cad or bat* #urther more, parole actual speech is 4u1 and not to be studied; the importance lies in langue, the structure of signs that mae speech possible in the 2rst place* The referent is not important either * 5istorical change a1ects the indi'idual parts of a language %hich, in turn, a1ects the %hole language* 6hange i s, therefore, disturbance and diseuilibrium in an other%ise con4ict-free system* It is also something that happens by accident*  Jakobso n$

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Structuralism: a detailed look.

Transcript of Notes on Structuralism

Notes on Structuralism [from Literary Theory,Literary Theory, An Introduction by Terry Eagleton; pages 70-90]

Northrop Frye: Literature itself had a system that was created through objective laws throughout history (modes, myth and genres). The four narrative categories of literature were comic, romantic, tragic and ironic, coinciding with the seasons, and by identifying the literary categories, we can identify literary modes for example, the hero is totally superior to others in the myth, in the romantic he is superior in degree. To analyse literature fully, we must expel history from it and analyse it using literary history only. Literature is as religion.

Structuralism is obsessed with structures and the laws that govern structures. Individual works become mere instances of a law or laws, and the meaning of one work depends upon its individual units and the relationships between them for example, an image of a sun and a moon in a poem is a structure, but structuralists believe that the meaning of one depends upon its relation to the other. Their meaning is relational, and thus all you need to know to infer meaning is found within the work. This also means that, as long as the relationships between the elements remain unchanged even if the elements are changed then the story will remain the same. The individual items themselves have no special symbolism or meaning.

Structuralism is analytical, indifferent to cultural value and goes deeper than face value to analyse the structure of a text.

Ferdinand de Saussure:

Language as a system of signs that should be studied as a complete system at a given point in time, and not diachronically, i.e. in its historical development. Each sign was made up of a signifier (a sound or word) and a signified (the image/concept). Ex: c-a-t the written is the signifier while the signified is cat, what the letters spell out. The relationship between them is arbitrary. This is also true for the whole word cat and what it refers to, the actual animal (the referent).

Each word, thus, has meaning only because it is different to others cats meaning exists in the fact that it is not cap, cad or bat.

Furthermore, parole actual speech is fluff and not to be studied; the importance lies in langue, the structure of signs that make speech possible in the first place. The referent is not important either.

Historical change affects the individual parts of a language which, in turn, affects the whole language. Change is, therefore, disturbance and disequilibrium in an otherwise conflict-free system. It is also something that happens by accident.

Jakobson:

The poetic is about a language in self-conscious relationship to itself that is, the poetic functioning of language promotes signs and draws attention to their material qualities rather than simply using them in communication. In the poetic, the sign is pulled away from its object, which gives it a certain independence.

Metaphors one sign is substituted for another because it is similar to it. Metonymic one sign is associated with another. We can make metaphors because we have a series of signs which are equivalent to one another, such as passion and flame. The poetic, however, picks equivalents based on the pattern or on their appearance, on their structure; they combine equivalences based on sound, meaning, rhythm. Poems, for Jakobson, were to be viewed as structures where he signifiers and signifieds had a single set of relations which are to be studied by their own, and not as reflections of something external. The text becomes an autonomous object.

Czech structuralists also insisted that each work was to be considered as one part of a whole.

Structuralism and narratology:

Claude Levi-Strauss different myths as variations of different themes. Myths were a kind of language which could be broken down into individual units. They acquired meaning only when combined together in particular ways, and the rules could be seen as grammer, a set of relations which would explain the narratives true meaning. Levi-Strauss believed that the relations were inherent in the human mind; by studying a narrative, we are studying universal mental operations they become a way of understanding and organizing reality.

Vladimir Propp seven spheres of action and 31 fixed elements make up all folk tale by combining the spheres of action in different ways. A.J. Greimas also added the idea of a structural unit, an actant (Subject, Object, Sender, Reciever, Helper, Opponent) which swallow up Propps spheres of action. Tzetan Todorov does the same with the Decameron by reducing all the characters to nouns and their actions as verbs, does allowing every story of the Decameron to be read as a kind of extended sentence.

Gerard Genette recit, the actual order of events in the text; histoire the sequence in which those events actually occurred; narration the act of narrating. The first two can be considered as plot and story. There are also five central categories of narrative analysis order (time order of narrative, including prolepsis/anticipation; analepsis/flashback); duration (time spent on narrations episodes); frequency (did an event happen once and was narrated once, or was it narrated several times but happened once?); mood distance (relation of the narration to its materials, i.e. is it recounting the story [diagesis] or representing it [mimesis?] and is it told in free/direct/indirect speech?) and perspective (point of view).

With point of view, the narrator may know more or less than the characters, the narrative may be delivered by an omniscient narrator or recounted by one character from within the story in one fixed position or In variable positions, or it may be recounted by several characters. There is also the matter of external focalization the narrator knows less than the characters.

There is also voice the act of narrating. A narrator may be heterodiegetic (absent from his own narrative), homodiegetic (inside his narrative, i.e. first person) or autodigetic (he is inside the narrative and is the main character, such as Harry Potter). Ergo, it alerts us to the difference between narration the act/process of telling a story and narrative what is actually said.

Gains of structuralism:

Demystification of literature literary work is a construct that can be analysed just like anything else. Moreover, it questions the uniqueness of literature. Structure can be found in both high brow and low brow literature, and it is no longer easy to assign literature a status of privilege just because it is literature. Meaning as a shared system of signification omitted the idea that it was a private or subjective experience; the individual was the subject of language, so the way the world is interpreted is through the languages one knows and has at their disposal. Reality is produced by language the sign-systems we had available to us make the world as it is.