This thesis proposes that the death of the author is neither a desirable, nor properly attainable goal of criticism, and that the concept of the author remained profoundly active even - and especially - as its disappearance was being articulated. As the phrase implies, the death of the author is seen to repeat the Nietzschean deicide. In Barthes, the idea of the author is explicitly connected to that of God, for Foucault and Derrida, to that of the transcendental subject of knowledge. Nowhere, however, is any demonstration forwarded as to why we must conceive author, transcendental subject, and divinity as specifications of the same subject, and therefore implicated in a common closure. Always and everywhere, the death of the au...
Despite the title of Roland Barthes’ essay “The Death of the Author,” its treatment of literature is...
In the course of this essay I wish to reopen the (never fully closed) question of whether it is advi...
This analysis of Foucault's ‘What is an Author?’ produces three main findings. First, Foucault was a...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D90320 / BLDSC - British Library Document...
Some six years after the publication his much celebrated essay, ‘The Death of the Author’, Roland Ba...
Roland Barthes in his famous essay “The Death of the Author” from a post-structuralist position took...
Abstract: This essay considers Barthes ’ and Derrida’s continuing dialogue with Nietzsche’s claim, “...
The Author died in Paris in 1967 by the hand of Roland Barthes, in his (in)famous essay “The Death o...
Fifty years ago, Roland Barthes declared the death of the author, setting the terms for a continuing...
Diploma thesis "I become speech." Death and Return of the Author in the Perspective of Philosophy of...
The most misunderstood essay in literary theory must be Roland Barthes's 'The Death of the Author' (...
The author was killed by Roland Barthes in 1968 in the essay "The Death of the Author". This was an ...
The Author died in Paris in 1967 by the hand of Roland Barthes, in his (in)famous essay “The Death o...
This article outlines selected shifts in thinking about authorship and authority that have occurred ...
This essay considers Barthes' and Derrida's continuing dialogue with Nietzsche's claim, "God is dead...
Despite the title of Roland Barthes’ essay “The Death of the Author,” its treatment of literature is...
In the course of this essay I wish to reopen the (never fully closed) question of whether it is advi...
This analysis of Foucault's ‘What is an Author?’ produces three main findings. First, Foucault was a...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D90320 / BLDSC - British Library Document...
Some six years after the publication his much celebrated essay, ‘The Death of the Author’, Roland Ba...
Roland Barthes in his famous essay “The Death of the Author” from a post-structuralist position took...
Abstract: This essay considers Barthes ’ and Derrida’s continuing dialogue with Nietzsche’s claim, “...
The Author died in Paris in 1967 by the hand of Roland Barthes, in his (in)famous essay “The Death o...
Fifty years ago, Roland Barthes declared the death of the author, setting the terms for a continuing...
Diploma thesis "I become speech." Death and Return of the Author in the Perspective of Philosophy of...
The most misunderstood essay in literary theory must be Roland Barthes's 'The Death of the Author' (...
The author was killed by Roland Barthes in 1968 in the essay "The Death of the Author". This was an ...
The Author died in Paris in 1967 by the hand of Roland Barthes, in his (in)famous essay “The Death o...
This article outlines selected shifts in thinking about authorship and authority that have occurred ...
This essay considers Barthes' and Derrida's continuing dialogue with Nietzsche's claim, "God is dead...
Despite the title of Roland Barthes’ essay “The Death of the Author,” its treatment of literature is...
In the course of this essay I wish to reopen the (never fully closed) question of whether it is advi...
This analysis of Foucault's ‘What is an Author?’ produces three main findings. First, Foucault was a...