Roland Barthes at the Collège de France
Author(s)
O'Meara, Lucy
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Language
EnglishAbstract
Roland Barthes at the Collège de France studies the four lecture courses given by Barthes in Paris between 1977 and 1980. This study, the first full-length account of this material, places Barthes’s teaching within institutional, intellectual and personal contexts. Analysing the texts and recordings of Comment vivre ensemble, Le Neutre and La Préparation du roman I et II in tandem with Barthes’s 1970s output, the book brings together for the first time all the strands of Barthes’s activity as writer, teacher and public intellectual. Theoretically wide-ranging in scope, Lucy O’Meara’s study focuses particularly on Barthes’s pedagogical style, addressing how his wilfully un-magisterial teaching links to the anti-systematic, anti-dogmatic goals of the rest of his work. Roland Barthes at the Collège de France reassesses the critical and ethical priorities of Barthes’s work in the decade before his death, demonstrating the vitally affirmative core of Barthes’s late thought.
Keywords
Languages; Barthes; Collège de France; Roland Barthes; SemioticsDOI
10.2307/j.ctt5vjk9qISBN
9781781388273OCN
836864293Publisher
Liverpool University PressPublisher website
https://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
Liverpool, 2012Grantor
Imprint
Liverpool University PressSeries
Contemporary French and Francophone Cultures,Classification
Literary theory