To open language up to ‘materiality’, to make of it a ‘work’, is ‘immediately to make oneself a stranger to language.’ (Sém: 7) With these words Kristeva argues that that function as social beings we most take for granted — speech — bears a radical alterity which returns in literature to mock our certitude and give body to our dreams. Language is the Unknown that lies just beyond our line of vision. It is the new sublime, overpowering and mastering us in the same way Africa and the Americas awed the colonial explorers. How can we come to terms with this unhomely place which gives us speech and then changes the rules of the game, dissolving ‘us’ in the process? For exile alters the shape of subjective space, according to Kristeva. The person who is in exile lacks a sense of her own proper place, a home. Her dislocation is acute, and where language is always represented as the unknowable stranger, the normally comfortable relationship between body and subjectivity breaks down. Reading Kristeva, I recognise my own position to be an unstable one — divided between the space occupied by an ego who judges and a subject-in-process moving from one form of subjectivity and another. Intentional (female) actor one moment; deprived of agency, sex and place in the next, ‘my’ interactions with the Kristevan text comprise vulnerability as well as a need to master.
-Anna Smith
Author(s): Julia Kristeva, Anne M. Menke (trans.)
Edition: 1
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Year: 1989
Language: English
Pages: 366
City: New York
Tags: Linguistics, Language and Languages, psychoanalysis
Contents
Part One: Introduction to Linguistics
Introduction
1. Language, La Langue, Speech, and Discourse
2. The Linguistic Sign
3. The Materiality of Language
Part Two: Language in History
Introduction
4. Anthropology and Linguistics: The Knowledge of Language in so-called Primitive Societies
5. The Egyptians: Their Writings
6. Mesopotamian Civilization: The Sumerians and Akkadians
7. China: Writing as Science
8. Indian Linguistics
9. The Phoenician Alphabet
10. Hebrews: The Bible and the Cabala
11. Logical Greece
12. Rome: The Transmission of Greek Grammar
13. Arab Grammar
14. Medieval Speculations
15. Humanists and Grammarians of the Renaissance
16. The Grammar of Port-Royal
17. The Encylopedie: La Langue and Nature
18. Language as History
19. Structural Linguistics
Part Three: Language and Languages
20. Psychoanalysis and Language
21. The Practice of Language
22. Semiotics
Conclusion
Notes
Works Principally Relied On
Index