The Impurity of Meaning: French Thought and the Return of the Linguistic Waste
Introduction French thought in the second half of the twentieth century resists easy characterization. Its major figures are usually grouped together under labels such as structuralism, post-structuralism, or French Theory, categories that are often as illuminating as they are reductive. Roland Barthes wrote on myth, literature, photography, and pleasure; Jacques Derrida developed deconstruction through close readings of philosophical texts; Jacques Lacan reformulated psychoanalysis through linguistics and topology; Michel Foucault investigated madness, discourse, punishment, and the historical constitution of knowledge. Their intellectual projects are sufficiently distinct that any attempt to identify a common denominator immediately risks oversimplification. Yet there is a striking family resemblance among them. Again and again, they direct their attention toward what appears secondary or marginal within established fields of knowledge. Derrida becomes interested in supplements, ...