Writing at Degree Zero: The Impossible Dream of Neutral Language
Introduction — Is There Such a Thing as Colorless Writing? Can writing ever truly be neutral? The question appears simple, almost naïve, yet it has haunted modern literature with remarkable persistence. From the desire to strip language of ornament to the ambition of eliminating ideology, writers have repeatedly pursued a form of expression that might stand free of historical burden. But what if this effort were misguided from the outset? What if the attempt to remove ideology and style only produces another kind of ideology and style? The concept of “degree zero,” developed by Roland Barthes, emerges precisely at this tension. Rather than designating a pure origin of language, it names a moment in which writing confronts its own limits: the impossibility of escaping form, history, and signification. To grasp this claim, one must begin not with literature, but with linguistics, before passing through Jean-Paul Sartre and arriving at Barthes’ decisive reconfiguration of the problem....