Talk:Roland Barthes
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[edit] 'Works' ironic
I just wanted to point out the irony of the section listing Barthe's publications being called "works". That is all, back to work everyone. --Jeremyclarke 22:49, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Barthes' or Barthes's?
Now is it Barthes'? If so, why? If the end-of-word "s" is silent, shouldn't we rather write Barthes's? (He was no Greek or Roman, either.) Balthus 20:11, 18 January 2006 (UTC)
According to The Elements of Style, Strunk & White, 1918:
- Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.
- Follow this rule whatever the final consonant. Thus write,
- Charles's friend
- Burns's poems
- the witch's malice
Rpresser 17:47, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Problem with "Structuralism" section
The "Structuralism" section contains this clause: "... thus allowing Barthes to view along linguistic lines." View what? 71.131.95.182
[edit] post-marxism
the post-marxism article was pointing to neo-communism, i split it out, but it will need much work to get it up to a basic level. if people are interested, please contribute what you know, edit my starter drivel :), and help build that article too. --Buridan 13:04, 10 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] works commentaries
i deleted the following comments because they are highly un-encyclopedic:
- A Lover's Discourse
A beautiful and original work that stands somewhere between poetry and criticism. It is considered a novel by some.
- Mythologies.
A particularly pleasant starting point, especially the famous first (The World of Wrestling) and last (Myth Today) essays.
"A Lover's Discourse" is beautifull, but that is an opinion, not a fact. Also it is considered as a novel by WHO? Why is Mythologies a "particulary pleasent starting point"? Any book may be a good starting point on Barthes' works, depending on what you want from this oeuvre.
Removed the adjective 'fine' describing the biography by Calvet; it is a pov - I believe it is biased work.al 21:46, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
[edit] redirect
"Elements of Semiology" redirects to "semiology", and "Michelet" to Jules Michelet. i dont think they should, because, altough the books are related to the articles, when someone clicks on a link on Barthes' article on the wikipedia, they expect to be taken to a page about the book, and not to a page about what the book is about.
[edit] Improve on Johns Hopkins link
Can no better link be found to Barthes online, other than the Johns Hopkins one. It is $80 for a individual subscription!! Vvirtually useless in an project like Wikipedia.
[edit] Left Something Out
It's strange that this article leaves out a dominate aspect of Barthes' life and philosopy, which is common to many Post-Structuralists. For example, here's a paragraph from the GLBTQ Encyclopedia article on Barthes:
- If a single factor, however, can be said to have alienated Barthes from the bourgeois culture he came to distrust and felt compelled to demystify--a deterministic approach Barthes himself rejected--it would be his "perverse" sexuality. Like Proust, if not like Gide, who saw himself as a pederast, Barthes was homosexual. And like Remembrance of Things Past, a work in which everyone except the narrator (who may or may not be named "Marcel") turns out to be gay, Barthes's critical texts--including ones that concern "text"--are best understood in relation to this sexual marginality. TimeDog 17:54, 28 March 2007 (UTC)