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If Language Is Not Substance, What Does Translation Transfer? Saussure and Benjamin in Dialogue

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“Übersetzung ist eine Form” (translation is a form) — Walter Benjamin, The Task of the Translator “La langue est une forme et non une substance” (language itself is a form, not a substance) — Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics Introduction Walter Benjamin's The Task of the Translator opens with a claim that immediately unsettles ordinary assumptions about art and literature: “No poem is intended for the reader, no picture for the beholder, no symphony for the listener.” Taken literally, the statement appears implausible. Poems are written to be read, paintings to be seen, and music to be heard. Yet Benjamin refuses this familiar picture. His concern is not empirical but structural: not who constitutes the ideal receiver, but what a work of art is. Translation is commonly understood as a means of making a text accessible to those unable to read the original. Yet Benjamin suspends this assumption as well. The focus shifts from the audience to the work...

No Poem Is Intended for the Reader: Walter Benjamin Against the Communication Model of Language

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An Opening That Sounds Impossible Walter Benjamin's The Task of the Translator (1923) occupies a curious place in twentieth-century thought. Written before language became a central problem in philosophy, the essay nevertheless raises questions that would later become central to this intellectual turn. Although Benjamin's immediate concern is translation, his opening pages challenge something much broader: the assumption that language is fundamentally a vehicle for transmitting meanings from one mind to another. He begins with a statement that seems almost designed to provoke disbelief: "No poem is intended for the reader, no picture for the beholder, no symphony for the listener." At first glance, the claim appears absurd. Surely poems are written for readers. Surely paintings are made to be seen. Surely translations exist to help those who cannot read the original. Benjamin's answer is a surprising no. These opening lines are not merely a reflection...

Prolegomena to a Possible Translation (3): Derrida, Saussure, and the Chain of Possible Substitutions

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Letter to a Japanese Friend. AI image “The word ‘deconstruction’, like all other words, acquires its value only from its inscription in a chain of possible substitutions, in what is too blithely called a ‘context’. For me, for what I have tried and still try to write, the word has interest only within a certain context, where it replaces and lets itself be determined by such other words as ‘écriture’, ‘trace’, ‘différance’, ‘supplement’, ‘hymen’, ‘pharmakon’, ‘marge’, ‘entame’, ‘parergon’, etc.” ( Derrida, Letter to a Japanese Friend ) Introduction In Letter to a Japanese Friend , Jacques Derrida responds to a question that appears deceptively simple: how should the term deconstruction be translated into Japanese? One might expect a concise definition. Instead, Derrida offers something quite different. Rather than explaining what deconstruction is, he reflects on how words acquire value and why no single expression can capture a fixed meaning. His reply rests on a bold claim: ...

Prolegomena to a Possible Translation (2): Derrida, Heidegger, and the Fate of “Deconstruction”

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Books. AI image Thesis This article argues that Derrida’s déconstruction should not be understood as a semantic translation of Heidegger’s Destruktion , but as the reactivation of a philosophical operation across heterogeneous linguistic systems. What is transmitted is not meaning as a stable content, but a structural demand internal to metaphysical discourse itself—one that only becomes legible through processes of translation, displacement, and iterative rearticulation. Introduction Derrida’s notion of déconstruction is often approached as a French equivalent of Heidegger’s Destruktion . Such a reading presupposes that philosophical meaning can remain intact while merely changing linguistic form. In Derrida’s account, however, the problem lies precisely in this assumption. What is at stake is not the transfer of a determinate content from one language to another, but the displacement of a philosophical operation across heterogeneous linguistic and conceptual regimes. From t...

Prolegomena to a Possible Translation (1): Derrida, Saussure, and the Value of Deconstruction

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A Letter. AI image Introduction In Letter to a Japanese Friend , Jacques Derrida responds to what appears to be a practical question: how should the word deconstruction be translated into Japanese? Yet instead of proposing an equivalent term, he begins with an unexpected qualification. What he offers, he writes, are merely "prolegomena to a possible translation" of the word into Japanese (Derrida, 1985, p. 1). The formulation is striking. Why only prolegomena ? Why only a possible translation? The answer leads beyond the problem of translation narrowly conceived. Rather than searching for a lexical equivalent, Derrida transforms the translator's question into an inquiry into how words acquire significance in the first place. Read in this light, the letter reveals an unexpected affinity with Ferdinand de Saussure's theory of linguistic value. Before translation can begin, both thinkers suggest, one must understand that words do not contain self-identical meanings...

The Relief of the Guard: Derrida, Saussure, and What Survives in Translation

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The Relief of the Guard. AI image Thesis Translation does not consist in transferring an intact meaning from one language to another. Drawing on Derrida's discussion of Aufhebung and relève , and illuminating it through Saussure's theory of linguistic value, this article argues that translation is better understood as a process of survival through transformation. What persists across languages is not an identical signified but a function or value reinscribed within a new system of relations. Introduction Bilingual dictionaries encourage a simple image of translation. A word in one language is matched with a corresponding word in another, as though meaning could be carried across linguistic borders intact. Such a view appears natural until one encounters terms for which no satisfactory equivalent exists. Translation then becomes less a matter of substitution than a confrontation with the structures that make meaning possible. This problem lies at the center of Jacques D...