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Against Deep Structure: A Saussurean Reconsideration of Generative Linguistics

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Introduction During the 1960s and 1970s, generative linguistics introduced the influential distinction between surface structure and deep structure , a framework intended to explain how sentences are generated from underlying syntactic representations. Sentences that appear different on the surface—such as active and passive constructions—were understood as sharing a common deep structure representing their core semantic relations. Ferdinand de Saussure approached language from a markedly different perspective. In the Course in General Linguistics , he emphasizes the systemic organization of language, arguing that linguistic elements acquire value only through their relations within the whole system. Roy Harris (2003) later questioned the generativist critique of Saussure, suggesting that abandoning observable linguistic criteria in favor of hypothetical underlying structures creates serious methodological difficulties. From this perspective, Saussure’s systemic conception of la...

Where Is the Language System? Revisiting Saussure in Light of Roy Harris

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Language Names and Linguistic Systems In the chapter “Linguistics after Saussure” in The Routledge Companion to Semiotics and Linguistics , Roy Harris draws attention to a persistent difficulty in the Saussurean conception of language. Linguistics claims to describe systems of signs, yet the entities to which such systems are usually attached—languages like “English,” “French,” or “Latin”—are not themselves clearly bounded objects. The everyday practice of naming languages sits uneasily beside the theoretical ambition to identify coherent linguistic systems. Harris formulates the problem in stark terms. The systems linguists analyze rarely align neatly with the language labels circulating in social life. As he observes: “The obvious difficulty (both for Saussure and for his successors) was that such systems do not unambiguously correspond to the commonly accepted language-names (such as ‘English’, ‘French’, ‘Latin’, etc.). So there is no guarantee that everything called, say, ‘En...

The Delicate Language Mechanism: Meaning, Difference, and the Slippage of Signs

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Mécanisme de la langue. AI image Introduction: Shadows of Meaning Language often appears effortless. Words seem to carry meaning directly, and communication usually proceeds without noticeable friction. Yet this apparent simplicity conceals a remarkably intricate mechanism. When examined closely, language reveals itself as a delicate relational network whose stability depends on the coordination of multiple dimensions at once. Ferdinand de Saussure was among the first to expose this hidden architecture. Once the complexity of this mechanism becomes visible, an intriguing consequence follows: moments of hesitation or instability in meaning are not accidental disruptions but natural byproducts of the system itself. Later thinkers would describe these moments as “slippage.” Understanding how they arise requires examining both the structure of language and the ways individuals respond when interpretation becomes uncertain. Saussure and the Hidden Architecture of Language Saussure...

Slippage and Play: Interpretation, Decision, and the Ethical Turn of Poststructuralism

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The Horizon of Play. AI image The Decentering of Structure In “Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences,” Jacques Derrida identifies a decisive shift in modern thought: the recognition that structure has no natural center. For centuries, Western metaphysics secured meaning by positing a stable origin — God, reason, consciousness, man — that organized the system while escaping its internal movement. The center limited what Derrida calls the “play” of the structure. It permitted substitutions among elements but was not itself subject to substitution. The rupture Derrida describes does not abolish structure. It reveals that the center is not an immutable presence but a function, a “non-locus” successively occupied by different names. Once this becomes thinkable, the consequences are profound. As Derrida writes, “in the absence of a center or origin, everything became discourse.” No transcendental signified stands outside the differential system of signs. Meanin...