Structuralism (2)

About This Presentation
Title:

Structuralism (2)

Description:

Fat Butt -- was already wasting his peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich like the pig he is' ... Lecture video: Theory 2 (review) Practice 2 (preview) * Start to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:145
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: Lin128

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Structuralism (2)


1
Structuralism (2)
  • De Saussure Q A
  • Structuralist Anthropology
  • Levi Strauss The Lesson
  • Structuralist Narratology
  • V. Propp The Lesson
  • A. J. Greimas The Lesson

Readings for next week
2
Q A (1) Language and Reality
  • Does it make a difference to call your mothers
    sister ??, aunt or Jenny?
  • If we do not have the word, ?, will we feel that
    meeting someone is a matter of fortunate
    pre-destination?
  • Is there any eternal, unchanging essence of
    mother or maternal love? Can we define them
    without using language (as a system of relations
    and difference)?

3
Q A (2) de Saussures Major ideas?
  • 1. The synchronic vs. the diachronic langue vs.
    parole
  • 2. Language is a system of difference. Meaning
    occurs in binary opposition between two signs.
    (e.g. toy, boy)
  • 3. sign signifier and signified the connection
    between them is arbitrary.

4
Q A (2) about de Saussure
  • Q Anyway, maybe I am kind of confused, but
    somehow I just feel he simply tries to reverse
    the places of reason"(creation of words) and
    results (things represented by words) through
    making up so many linguistics elements, such as
    phoneme, morpheme, syntax, semiology, parole and
    something like that. My brain is really full now
    with all these abstract ideas.
  • A Whats reversed is the meaning-language
    binary. Language produces meanings (or we
    produces meanings through language) we dont
    just use language to reflect our ideas. The
    above terms can be an example of this idea.

5
Q A (3) Form and Structure?
  • Form is inseparable from meaning
  • (composed of all the literary elements in a text)
  • Structure is what makes meaning possible.
  • (e.g. b vs. p subjpredicate cooked vs.
    raw, etc.)

6
Claude Levi-Strauss
  • 1. Studies culture as a sign system e.g. eating
    customs, taboos related to menstruation,
    initiation rites, kinship relations. (e.g. ring
    in Chinese society ??)
  • 2. Kinship system structures how things or
    people are exchanged within a culture. e.g.
    women in exchange for dowry.
  • 3. We think in terms of binaries. (e.g. raw vs.
    cooked good vs. bad)
  • 4. Myth basic units mythemes, e.g. in Oedipus
    myth overrelating and underrating of blood
    relations

7
Claude Levi-Strauss on Oedipus the King
  • overrelating of blood relations Oedipus
    marries his mother Antigone buries her brother,
    despite prohibition
  • underrating of blood relations Oedipus kills
    his father, Laios
  • The heroic Oedipus kills the Sphinx
  • The supernatural/pre-destined
    Oedipusswollen foot prophecy
  • Mythical thought always progresses from the
    awareness of oppositions toward their
    resolution. (Structural Anthropology 224)

8
Levi Strauss examples (2) The Lesson
  • preliminary understanding
  • -- setting a ghetto in NY and FAO Schwartz
  • -- social background children with Aunt
    Gretchen, but not with their mothers some
    richer, some homeless.
  • -- narrator Sylvia
  • -- plot (beginning-middle-end)

9
Levi Strauss examples (2) The Lesson
  • initiation story (e.g. Araby AP)
  • a child playing in a group ? rites of passage
    price check at F.A.O. Schwarz? learning
    something separated from the others
  • ? between self-indulgence and self-improvement

10
Levi Strauss examples (2) The Lesson
  • binary opposition
  • between the poor and the rich
  • between the non-educated and the educated

11
Brooklyn and Bronx in NY
  • View of the Kingsborough Houses, Brooklyn,
    1989.(image source)
  • Woman addict entering an abandoned building on
    Vyse Avenue, South Bronx, 1989, to go to a
    crackhouse in the basement.

12
F.A.O. Schwarz

13
The uneducated the educated Sylvia Ms. Moore
  • Sylvias language Colloquial Black English
    (Ebonics)
  • Syntax Run-on e.g. Back in the days when
    everyone was old and stupid or young and foolish
    and me and Sugar were the only ones just right,
    this lady moved on our block with nappy hair and
    proper speech and no makeup.
  • Pronunciation, slang and dirty language Aunt
    Gretchen been screwed into the go-along for so
    long, it's a blood-deep natural thing with her.
  • it's puredee hot and she's knockin herself out
    about arithmetic (2nd par)
  • And the starch in my pinafore scratching the
    shit outta me
  • learn (unwillingly) from Ms. Moore . . .being
    surly, which is a Miss Moore word

14
The narrator ? Ms. Moore
  • ? laughs at her as she does at the junk man who
    went about his business like he was some big-time
    president and his sorry-ass horse his secretary
  • ? hates her as much as the "winos who pissed on
    our handball walls and stand up on our hallways
    and stairs so you couldnt halfway play
    hide-and-seek."
  • ? Not related in blood
  • ? Hates her goddamn college degree dislikes
    her plans "boring-ass things for us to do" (1st
    par 872-73).

15
The narrator ?? the other kids
  • 1. Bonds with Sugar
  • 2. Knows what Ms. Moore will teach (p. 873 And
    Miss Moore files that remark away for next week's
    lesson on brotherhood, I can tell.
  • 3. Wants to refute her (about slums).
  • 4. Wants to escape and use the money elsewhere.

16
Levi Strauss examples (2) The Lesson
  • money as a sign whose meaning determined by
    what it is associated with
  • e.g.1) 35 dollars clown toy ? the rich
  • 35 dollars having a bed and being with
    ones family ? lower class,
  • 2) money 300 (microscope) ? 480
    (paperweight) ? 1195 (sailboat). 5-cent
    sailboat
  • 3) haves and have-nots no desk (Junebug), no
    homework (Big Butt), no home(Flyboy)

17
Structuralist narratology Vladimir Propp
  • syntax as the basic model Subject predicate
    Actor function
  • Propp 7 actors, or "spheres of action"
    (villain, hero, false hero, donorprovider,
    helper, dispatcher, princess and her father)
    and 31 functions.
  • Actors are not characters they are narrative
    functions, or types of actions of the characters.
  • One character can be different actors at
    different moments. (e.g. Cinderella Snow White,
    The Long Enchantment.)

18
Propp examples (1)
  • James Bonds 007 films
  • actor female helpers (usu. appearing in double,
    one from the enemys side and one as Bonds
    comrade)
  • 1 major function sex (which usu. the films
    begin and end).

19
Propp examples (2) Characters ? Actors
  • no princess and her father or Donor
  • Who is the dispatcher? Who the helper? Whos
    the hero? False hero? Opponent?

20
Propp examples (2) Characters ? Actors
  • Food Flyboy -- checking out what everybody
    brought for lunch.
  • Junebug -- punchin on Q.T.'s arm for potato
    chips.
  • Fat Butt -- was already wasting his
    peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich like the pig he
    is"
  • Attention Rosie Giraffe -- shifting from one
    hip to the other waiting for somebody to step on
    her foot or ask her if she from Georgia . . .
  • (p. 873)

21
Characters (2) funs
  • Sylvia rather go to the pool or to the show
    where it's cool terrorize the West Indian kids
    and take their hair ribbons and their money too.
  • In the taxi Flyboy and June Bugg are
    fascinated with the meter ticking and Junebug
    starts laying bets as to how much it'll read . .
    .
  • ? None of them receives Ms. Moores message at
    this point.

22
Characters (2) ? F. A. O.
  • Can we steal?" Sugar
  • Want to buy that there. Big Butt
  • Mercedes says, . . . I have a box of
    stationary on my desk and a picture of my cat, My
    godmother bought the stationary and desk. There's
    a big rose on each sheet and the envelopes smell
    like roses."
  • Rosie Giraffe says that "white folks" are crazy
    in the way they spend money
  • "I'd like a shower. Tiring day," say Flyboy.

23
Sugar the narrator ? sailboat
  • Sugar criticizes democracy
  • Sylvia "Unbelievable," I hear myself say and am
    really stunned. . . . "My sailboat cost me about
    fifty cents."
  • Wants to know how much a real boat costs. Going
    in, she feel funny, shame.
  • ? "Watcha bring us here for, Miss Moore?"
    (anger)
  • What kinda work they do and how they live and
    how come we ain't in on it?
  • ? But ain't nobody gonna beat me at nuthin.
  • Is Sugar the false hero and Sylvia the hero?

24
Propp examples (2) The Lesson
  • Hero Sylvia
  • Opponent themselves, in their refusal to learn
  • False Hero Sugar
  • Helper the toy store?

25
Propp Greimas
  • Propp's seven 'spheres of action?
  • Greimass three pairs of binary oppositions
    including

and three basic patterns 1. Wanting (Desire,
search, or aim), 2. Exchange (communication) 3.
Contradiction (Auxiliary support or hindrance).
  • six roles (actants)
  • 1. Subject/Object,
  • 2. Sender/ Receiver
  • 3. Helper/Opponent-

26
Propp Greimas (2)
  • Propp's 31 functions ? further abstracted into
  • Greimass 3 structures for example
  • Propp One member of a family either lacks
    something or desires to have something.

Disequilibrium, contract broken, disjunction
27
A. J. Greimass universal grammar
  • three pairs of actants Helper/Opponent,
    Sender/Reciever, Subject/Object
  • three basic patterns of action
  • contractive (breaking/setting contract,
    alienation, reintegration ),
  • disjunctive (departure, arrival),
  • and performative (trial, task).
  • ? deep semantic structure of human thinking and
    narrative.

28
"the semiotic rectangle
  • elementary structure of signification
  • a binary opposition their negation
  • A - A
  • (e.g. marriage/normal)
    (e.g. incest/abnormal)
  • -A1
    A1
  • (e.g. male adultery/non -abnormal)
    (female adultery /non-normal )

contradiction
Simple negation
29
"the semiotic rectangle the neutral term
  • Setting the semiotic rectangle in motion
  • A - A
  • (e.g. marriage/normal)
    (e.g. incest/abnormal)
  • -A1
    A1
  • (e.g. male adultery/non -abnormal)
    (female adultery /non-normal )

Complicated by Platonic love
Neutralized by divorce
30
Greimas Example The Lesson

poverty wealth Self-Presumption Education/field trip
ignorance knowledge funs Daily reality (desk, family separation)
The only right one, hates her college degree.
Rich lower class
Self-Presumption
Steal cheat and pretend
31
Greimas Example The Lesson
Self-improvement Ignorance, Fun, Hatred

Knowledge power Racial/Class inequality
32
Toni Cade Bambara (1939-1995)
  • born in New York City and raised in the Citys
    Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant sections.
  • A writer of essay, film scripts and novel, a
    civil rights activist.
  • As a writer, she works to "lift up a few useable
    truths " in a "racist, hardheaded, heedless
    society."
  • But she also says that writing is a way for her
    to "hear myself, check myself," a discipline that
    makes her more honest and clear-headed. (source)

Image source
33
Reading for next week
  • 1. Textbook -- Structuralism Levi-Strauss
    Vladimir Propp
  • 2. Textbook pp. 40- 41 Propp and Greimas



  • 3. "The Purloined Letter
  • 4. Lecture video Theory 2 (review) Practice 2
    (preview)
  • Start to read M. Butterfly.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)