Structuralism
Structuralism is a 20th Century intellectual
movement and approach to the human sciences (it has had a profound
effect on linguistics, sociology, anthropology and other fields in addition to
philosophy) that attempts to analyze a specific field as a complex
system of interrelated parts. Broadly speaking, Structuralism holds
that all human activity and its products, even perception and thought
itself, are constructed and not natural, and in particular that
everything has meaning because of the language system in which we
operate. It is closely related to Semiotics, the study of signs, symbols
and communication, and how meaning is constructed and understood.
There
are four main common ideas underlying Structuralism as a general
movement: firstly, every system has a structure; secondly, the structure
is what determines the position of each element of a whole;
thirdly, "structural laws" deal with coexistence rather than changes;
and fourthly, structures are the "real things" that lie
beneath the surface or the appearance of meaning.
Structuralism
is widely regarded to have its origins in the work of the Swiss
linguistic theorist Ferdinand de Saussure (1857 - 1913) in the early
20th Century, but it soon came to be applied to many other fields,
including philosophy, anthropology, psychoanalysis, sociology, literary theory
and even mathematics. In the early 20th Century, Saussure developed a science
of signs based on linguistics (semiotics or semiology). He held
that any language is just a complex system of signs that express ideas,
with rules which govern their usage. He called the underlying abstract
structure of a language, "langue", and the concrete
manifestations or embodiments, "parole". He concluded that any
individual sign is essentially arbitrary, and that there is no natural
relationship between a signifier (e.g. the word "dog") and the
signified (e.g. the mental concept of the actual animal).
Unlike
the Romantic or Humanist models, which hold that the author is the starting
point or progenitor of any text, Structuralism argues that any piece
of writing (or any "signifying system") has no origin, and
that authors merely inhabit pre-existing structures ("langue")
that enable them to make any particular sentence or story ("parole"),
hence the idea that "language speaks us", rather than that we
speak language. Structuralism was also to some extent a reaction against
Phenomenology in that it argued that the "depth" of experience
could in fact only be an effect of structures which are not themselves
experiential.
Although
they would probably all have denied being part of this so-called
movement, the philosopher Michel Foucault, the anthropologist Claude
Lévi-Strauss (1908 - 2009), the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan (1901 -
1981), the developmental psychologist Jean Piaget (1896 - 1980), the
linguists Roman Jakobson (1896 - 1982) and Noam Chomsky (1928 -
), the literary critic Roland Barthes (1915 - 1980) and the Marxist
theorists Louis Althusser (1918 - 1990) and Nicos Poulantzas
(1936 - 1979) were all instrumental in developing the theory and techniques of
Structuralism, most of this development occurring in France.
Barthes,
in particular, demonstrated the way in which the mass media disseminated
ideological views based on its ability to make signs, images and
signifiers work in a particular way, conveying deeper, mythical
meanings within popular culture than the surface images immediately
suggest (e.g. the Union jack signifies the nation, the crown, the empire,
"Britishness", etc).
By
the 1960s, it had become a major force within the overall Continental
Philosophy movement in Europe, and came to take Existentialism’s pedestal in
1960s France. In the 1970s, however, it came under increasing internal fire
from critics who accused it of being too rigid and ahistorical,
and for favoring deterministic structural forces over the ability of
individual people to act, and schools like Deconstructionism and
Post-Structuralism attempted to distinguish themselves from the simple use
of the structural method and to break with structuralistic thought. In retrospect,
it is more these movements it spawned, rather than Structuralism itself, which
commands attention.
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