The Problem of “Pure Difference”: A Critical Examination of Weber’s Reading of Saussure
Books. AI image Introduction In Closure and Exclusion , Samuel Weber proposes a reconstruction of Ferdinand de Saussure’s theory of language centered on the notion of “pure difference.” According to his account, Saussure defines linguistic value as differential and thereby risks unleashing an unbounded dissemination of distinctions. The stability of the system, Weber argues, can only be secured by bracketing diachrony and invoking the “institution of language.” The resulting structure is said to depend upon a suppression of history. This interpretation is problematic at its foundation. It rests on a decisive conceptual shift: the rendering of la langue as the generic term “language.” Once this shift occurs, difference can appear as a quasi-ontological principle prior to the system rather than as a structural feature internal to it. Weber’s question—“what limits difference?”—thus arises from a displacement already embedded in the terminology. A return to Saussure’s distinctions sug...