wenglund wrote:Mister Scratch wrote:wenglund wrote:
I haven't read Juliann's "stuff" (except brief snippets from the discussion I had with Scratch and Beastie regarding her definition of "apostate"). Nor, for that matter, have I read much of anything on poststructuralism. In other words, neither has informed my current view. What little I have read of poststructuralism, it doesn't resonate with me. Unlike poststructuralists, I don't reject the claim to have discovered truths or facts about the worlds. I strenuously disagree with Barth, a leading poststructuralist, when he assertied, in "Death of the Author", that the author is not the prime source for meaning in a text.
Actually, his name is "Barthes," Wade. And you have, ironically enough, only reaffirmed his argument from "The Death of the Author." He says, towards the end of that essay, that the "birth of the reader" only comes about at the expense of the author. In other words, he is making a case for
reciprocity. It is naïve to assume that the author is the final arbiter of any text's meaning. You can go back to well before the poststructuralists for that.
Given my repeated comment: "as the ULTIMATE AUTHORITY of what I say and mean", I can't imagine how would reasonably assume I have reafirm Barthes' essay.
Because the essay argues (convincingly) that the author as "the ULTIMATE AUTHORITY" is a demonstrable falsehood. And this isn't just from Barthes. It has been reaffirmed, starting with the New Critics, again and again and again. Interpretation of any text is *always* a function of multiple things, including both the author and the reader---in other words, interpretation and meaning involve reciprocity. Your claim to "ULTIMATE AUTHORITY" is really just a reiteration of the Intentional Fallacy.
However, given how you have assumed that you, as the reader, may be the final arbiter of what I say and mean, you are thus free to read my statement however you wish, and thereby, as you tyupically do, deem it exactly opposite in meaning from what I as the author intended, and in that way I can understand how you might conclude that I was reafirming Barthes argument.
We *both* have to work on the meaning, Wade. That is Barthes's point. You only reaffirm how right he is when you continue to deny reciprocity and insist on yourself as the "ULTIMATE" arbiter of meaning.
And, using that same "reasoning", you endow me, the reader, with final arbitership of what you,
No one is endowing either the reader nor the author with final "arbitership." It is a two-way street. That's Barthes's point. No one is ever really going to understand you until you let go of this "I AM THE ULTIMATE AUTHORITY" anal retentiveness.
the author meant when you said I reaffirmed Barthes' argument, and I will take the same liberty you have taken and will interpret it exactly opposite to what you mean, and then in that way it does make sense. Then again, since I, as a reader of Barthes, am according to you, as much of a final arbiter of his essay as you are, then I am free to interpret it as suggesting the opposite of you.
Which is what? That readers are totally irrelevant? Well, we already know that you think that, Wade.
As such, then your statement about my statement may make sense. But, to me, neither of these three strategies make as much sense as to take the author at his/her word.
In other words, everyone is a liar. Real nice. And oddly, I seem to remember you labeling me "paranoid."
Anyway, I think you haven't so much demonstrated my "postconstructionism" as you have your own.
I don't know what "postconstructionism" is. Nor was it ever my intention to prove that you were a "postconstructionist," whatever that is.
And, I accept the "self" as a singular and coherent entity.
Nonsense. Your "self" can be viewed as a construction, too. Or do you want to claim that you are somehow magically "yourself" without the structure and undergirding provided by Mormonism?
Aren't you here trying to convince me of a postconstructionist idea? If so, then isn't that evidence that I am not a postconstructionist (How can you convince me of something I am supposedly already concinced of and have ascribed to)?
Again, it's not my intention to convince you to be a "postconstructionist."
I view the "self" as like a singular and coherent spunge which may be shaped and colored by what I absorb from Mormonism and a host of other fountains of epistemic water.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
So then you do agree that there is a certain degree of "social construction" going on. I.e., a dry "spunge" is very different from a "colored and absorbent" one, no?