Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Pleasure of the Text (French: Le Plaisir du Texte) is a 1973 book by the literary theorist Roland Barthes. Summary. Barthes sets out some of his ideas about literary theory. He divides the effects of texts into two: plaisir ("pleasure") and jouissance, translated as "bliss" but the French word also carries the meaning of "orgasm".

    • Roland Barthes, Richard Miller, Richard Howard
    • 1973
  2. A book by the French critic Roland Barthes on the eroticism of reading and writing, translated by Richard Miller with a note by Richard Howard. The book consists of fragments, aphorisms, and phylacteries that explore the pleasure, bliss, and ecstasy of the text.

  3. 21 de nov. de 2022 · The pleasure of the text. by. Barthes, Roland. Publication date. 1975. Topics. Literature -- Aesthetics. Publisher. New York : Hill and Wang.

  4. What is it that we do when we enjoy a text? What is the pleasure of reading? The French critic and theorist Roland Barthes's answers to these questions constitute "perhaps for the first time in...

  5. What is it that we do when we enjoy a text? What is the pleasure of reading? The French critic and theorist Roland Barthes's answers to these questions constitute "perhaps for the first time in the history of criticism... not only a poetics of reading... but a much more difficult achievement, an erotics of reading....

    • Roland Barthes
  6. 20 de dez. de 2013 · Learn about the influential French critic's theory of writing and literature, his support for the New Novel and New Wave, and his critique of lisable and scriptible texts. Explore his concepts of white writing, zero degree writing, and the pleasure of the text.

  7. Barthes's obvious intention in writing The Pleasure of the Text was to associate a theory of the text with a concept which had been totally neglected during the apogee of structuralism, that of pleasure. Recently, Barthes appears to have exceeded the systematics of his earlier studies (S/Z, Systdme de la mode, etc.) to affirm the pleasure one ...