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Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Late Nights with Saussure

In case anyone was wondering about the life of  a certain college student and her favorite late night pastimes and endeavors, this is not the post for you. If, however, you enjoy the combination of serious (or seriously confusing literary theory) and sarcastic commentary on a few things I've learned so far. Then you might be in luck. In all actuality though I've written way too much for an assignment and my late night writing self threw in a few hilarious remarks that I would never turn in, but are too good to throw away. So if you have never hear of Ferdinand de Saussure or Gerald Graff, congratulations! If you want to learn more go ahead and Google them since my account will be mostly focused on a topic trying to combine their worlds. A tongue twister before we start: Saussure is the signifier and the signified that symbolizes the sign of stressed sarcastic scholars and students who stay up subsequently to the sun's setting.

Saussure With a Chance of Graff
            Language, the interpretation of collective sounds and signs used to communicate with other humans. In Saussure’s lectures on General Linguistics he describes language, both written and spoken, and the concept of signs. While these are both fixed uses in society they are not of themselves unchangeable. As the world changes, technology advances, and opinions and values change, so do signs and the language that has been developed to communicate them. With this as the basis on which ideas are formed and shared, Saussure argues that is where meaning originates. In order to understand the majority of Saussure’s argument for the smallest units of origin it may help to develop the conversation that Graff credits with his understanding of meaning.
            The sign is created by connecting the signified, a concept, and a signifier, a sound image, which corresponds to each other within language in the form of words. Once a sign is learned you cannot think of the concept without the sound image that corresponds to it. For example, the word “arbor” triggers the concept image of a tree. Although there is nothing inherent about a physical tree that demands for it to be called “arbor” or “tree,” rather was the letters A-R-B-O-R and their collective sounds Ahr-ber that were united with the idea of a tree in the minds of people that shared the same language. Through further development of language the word “arbor” was connected with the word “tree” so that both words produced the same concept image. Saussure points out that the concept image varies by person but may still validates the sign in most general cases. For example when thinking of trees one man might imagine an oak while his neighbor envisions a sycamore and Santa thinks pine. Each tree is justified because it is included in the sign. In addition to alternate words arbor and tree, Saussure addresses words in different languages that relate to the concept image. “The succession of sounds [that] serves as its signifier in French; that it could be represented equally by just any other sequence is proved by differences among languages and by the very existence of different languages.” (Saussure 67-68) When a person gains mastery of a language it becomes easier to learn other languages because instead of assigning a concept and sound image to everything, new words are added to the sign they already understand.
            While all the technical aspects of language and signs and concepts are intriguing and important, it can be easy to get lost in the smallness of individual units. If the development of language had to include a detailed description of how language is possible and all the physical, mental, and natural components, like Saussure compiled thoughts, the human race would’ve been doomed. Thankfully it is only after centuries of development and a very passionate linguist that these actions could be explained in excruciating detail. Once Saussure is partially understood it becomes possible to apply his theory in conversation and textual readings. However if you were to proceed word by word to find meaning in each individual sign, it would overcomplicate the text. Graff in his essay Disliking Books at an Early Age describes his struggle to find meaning in the text, eventually overcoming this by exploring the conversation and debate surrounding the text he struggled with. Criticizing those who he thinks look too deep into the text for meaning Graff says they “have become so obsessed with sophisticated critical theories that they have lost the passion they once had for literature itself.” (Graff 44) While understanding the signs is necessary for basic language and communication both spoken and written, not paying attention to the debate could make you miss the greater meaning. Graff is obnoxious enough to bring Saussure’s attention away from the signs alone and back into the conversation. Graff probably connects the concept image of Saussure to the sound image “sickly fascination with analysis and theory.”

            No theory is completely true and flawless, and all are subject to the opinions of their creators. A reader’s job is to find meaning wherever he can and he is free to pick and choose and combine theories. As a reader I appreciate Saussure’s intricacy and the levels of understanding that exist within his theory. I probably won’t try to find meaning in every sign that I know to exist because it is exhausting and quite often, especially in this world or sarcasm, would lead away from some of the meaning that could otherwise be found in the text. I do believe that this is a useful tool to employ sometimes while reading and make me sound smarter when I talk with linguistic students. By somewhat understanding Saussure I join a community of scholars and students that has grown over the years to appreciate and start to understand him while we roll our eyes at each other and groan.

Now time to edit out all of the things I don't think my professor would appreciate and get some sleep. I have priorities after all...