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Saussure and the elusive question of the origin

  • Demelza Marlin
Published/Copyright: November 10, 2008
Semiotica
From the journal Volume 2008 Issue 172

Abstract

Before he gave the lectures that were to become the Course in General Linguistics, Ferdinand de Saussure undertook research into an ancient practice of inscribing anagrams into Old Latin poems. His primary concern in this research was the elusive question of ‘the origin.’ Commentators like Sylvère Lotringer and Jean Starobinski contend that, in seeking an authorial origin for the anagrams, Saussure was lured into a logocentric conception of language. However, a close examination of Saussure's theory of synchronic linguistics reveals that it is the language system itself that produces its own origin as a conceptual possibility. With reference the to theory of the ‘two Saussure's,’ this paper will argue that both the anagrams research, and the elaboration of synchronic linguistics in the Course, invite us to rethink the status of ‘the origin’ in Saussure's earlier work.

Published Online: 2008-11-10
Published in Print: 2008-October

© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin

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  4. Terminological equivalence in legal translation: A semiotic approach
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  7. Wittgenstein as Mastersinger
  8. Ambiguity and metaphor
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  12. Resistance and rescue in Beauvoir's The Blood of Others and The Mandarins: A semiotic contribution to the thinking of the ‘being-for-other’ existential category
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  17. Multi safe compound constructions: A reply to Anders Søgaard
  18. On the linguistic expression of subjectivity: Towards a sign-centered approach
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  20. Textual mapping of imitation and intertextuality in college and university mission statements: A new institutional perspective
  21. Catchments, growth points, and the iterability of signs in classroom communication
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