Desire in Language: A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art

Voorkant
Columbia University Press, 1980 - 305 pagina's

Desire in Language traces the path of an investigation, extending over a period of ten years, into the semiotics of literature and the arts. But the essays of Julia Kristeva in this volume, though they often deal with literature and art, do not amount to either "literary criticism" or "art criticism." Their concern, writes Kristeva, "remains intratheoretical: they are based on art and literature in order to subvert the very theoretical, philosophical, or semiological apparatus."

Probing beyond the discoveries of Sigmund Freud, Jacques Lacan, Roman Jakobson and others, Julia Kristeva proposes and tests theories centered on the nature and development of the novel, and on what she has defined as a signifying practice in poetic language and pictural works. Desire in Language fully shows what Roman Jakobson has called Kristeva's "genuine gift of questioning generally adopted 'axioms, ' and her contrary gift of releasing various 'damned questions' from their traditional question marks."

 

Inhoudsopgave

INTRODUCTION
iii
THE ESSAYS
9
THE ETHICS OF LINGUISTICS
11
THE BOUNDED TEXT
24
WORD DIALOGUE AND NOVEL
52
HOW DOES ONE SPEAK TO LITERATURE?
80
FROM ONE IDENTITY TO AN OTHER
112
THE FATHER LOVE AND BANISHMENT
136
THE NOVEL AS POLYLOGUE
147
GIOTTOS JOY
198
MOTHERHOOD ACCORDING TO GIOVANNI BELLINI
225
PLACE NAMES
259
Notes
280
INDEX
283
Copyright

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Over de auteur (1980)

Julia Kristeva is professor of linguistics at the Université de Paris VII and author of many acclaimed works and novels, including The Severed Head: Capital Visions, This Incredible Need to Believe, Hatred and Forgiveness, and Teresa, My Love: An Imagined Life of the Saint of Avila, all published by Columbia. She is the recipient of the Hannah Arendt Prize for Political Thought and the Holberg International Memorial Prize.

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