Signs of Literature: Language, Ideology, and the Literary Text

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Signs of Literature: Language, Ideology, and the Literary Text
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Kenneth James Hughes
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:232
Dimensions(mm): Height 229,Width 153
Category/GenreSemantics
ISBN/Barcode 9780889222366
ClassificationsDewey:808.042
Audience
Undergraduate
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Talon Books,Canada
Imprint Talon Books,Canada
Publication Date 1 January 1986
Publication Country Canada

Description

This language primer begins with a suitably esoteric-looking chapter called "The Language of Time." It isn't until the second paragraph that the unsuspecting reader realizes Hughes is talking about the language of Time magazine, which he analyzes as a piece of fiction. Indeed, for Hughes, there is no such thing as a substantive distinction between fiction and non-fiction--there are only texts that do things with structural techniques of syntax and signs. Some of these texts we have commonly agreed to believe are fiction; others we have commonly agreed to believe are fact. None of these texts, however, has anything to do with truth, much less Truth with a capital "T". In an amazing brief and headlong rush through the history of language from classical Greece to the 20th century, Hughes demonstrates convincingly that neither the empirical world, nor the metaphysical world, has ever informed language. Rather, it is always language which informs the world. Hughes's careful analysis of the techniques of the English language, from Anglo-Saxon verse to the latest post-modern text, constantly reminds us that language is always a made thing, and that the empirical objects captured by language are never immediate, but always mediated by the perception and the craft of the speaker or the author. This book is a must for every serious student of language and literature: because it introduces the reader so effortlessly to the latest vocabulary and techniques of structuralist criticism, it is a basic tool for anyone wishing to communicate his or her ideas to anyone else, and in any discipline. The surprise of the book for the lay reader is that it is so richly entertaining. Its constant demystification of the technique of communication we most take for granted--common speech--offers the reader surprise and delight from the first page to the last.

Author Biography

Kenneth James Hughes Kenneth James Hughes is an artist, author and teacher and has published numerous essays, articles and reviews. He lives in Winnipeg and teaches at St. John's College of the University of Manitoba. Signs of Literature: Language, Ideology and the Literary Text was published in 1986.