Published: 2010-01-01

The Discourse of History

Roland Barthes

Abstract

The article focuses on linguistic features of historical discourse to interrogate the degree of difference between historiography and imaginary narration: is it valid to regard historiography as secured by its privileged signifying relationship with reality it purports to be representing? In the section devoted to the act of utterance Barthes uses the concept of shifters introduced by Roman Jacobson in order to identify those features of historical discourse that organize it, address the reader or announce the presence, or absence, of the writing subject – the historiographer. In the section devoted to the issues of utterance, in turn, he underlines those discursive processes which serve to break down historical content into units and then discusses their role in the establishment of the linguistic and cultural status of historiography. In consequence, Barthes sees historical discourse as narration generating realistic effect in its signifying process.

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Citation rules

Barthes, R. (2010). The Discourse of History. Er(r)go. Theory - Literature - Culture, (20/21). Retrieved from https://trrest.vot.pl/ojsus/index.php/ERRGO/article/view/2551

ER(R)GO nr 20 (1/2010) / 21 (2/2010) - editor's picks/translations

No. 20/21 (2010)
Published: 2010-01-01


ISSN: 1508-6305
eISSN: 2544-3186
Ikona DOI 10.31261/errgo

Publisher
University of Silesia Press | Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego i Wydawnictwo Naukowe "Śląsk"

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