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Mythologies by Roland Barthes
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Mythologies

by Roland Barthes

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1,63022,057 (4.08)5
Recently added bydjsanders, MMcM, everythingiszen01, chapesh, cpgabriel, peleiades, deadair, private library, zenomax
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While this book may have been revolutionary when first published, it is now a bit dated. The theories are all quite mainstream, and the over-theorising of popular culture reads almost as a spoof of French theorists rather than a serious
exploration of culture and/or semiotics. ( )
  ForrestFamily | Jun 26, 2008 |
Barthes - genius! Life changing author! ( )
  sideb16 | Oct 9, 2007 |
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Epigraph
The grandiloquent truth of gestures on life's great occasions.
Baudelaire
Dedication
First words
The virtue of all-in wrestling is that it is the spectacle of excess.
Quotations
I think that cars today are almost the exact equivalent of the great Gothic cathedrals: I mean the supreme creation of an era, conceived with passion by unknown artists, and consumed in image if not in usage by a whole population which appropriates them as a purely magical object.
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Jack Drummond

Mythologies (book)

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0374521506, Paperback)

"[Mythologies] illustrates the beautiful generosity of Barthes's progressive interest in the meaning (his word is signification) of practically everything around him, not only the books and paintings of high art, but also the slogans, trivia, toys, food, and popular rituals (cruises, striptease, eating, wrestling matches) of contemporary life . . . For Barthes, words and objects have in common the organized capacity to say something; at the same time, since they are signs, words and objects have the bad faith always to appear natural to their consumer, as if what they say is eternal, true, necessary, instead of arbitrary, made, contingent. Mythologies finds Barthes revealing the fashioned systems of ideas that make it possible, for example, for 'Einstein's brain' to stand for, be the myth of, 'a genius so lacking in magic that one speaks about his thought as a functional labor analogous to the mechanical making of sausages.' Each of the little essays in this book wrenches a definition out of a common but constructed object, making the object speak its hidden, but ever-so-present, reservoir of manufactured sense."--Edward W. Said

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:23 -0400)

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