enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Structuralism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuralism

    Structuralism is an intellectual current and methodological approach, primarily in the social sciences, that interprets elements of human culture by way of their relationship to a broader system. It works to uncover the structural patterns that underlie all the things that humans do, think, perceive, and feel.

  3. Textuality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textuality

    Textuality is a practice. Through a text’s textuality, it makes itself mean, makes itself be, and makes itself come about in a particular way. Through its textuality, the text relinquishes its status as identity and affirms its condition as pure difference. In indifference, the text "dedefines" itself, etches itself in a texture or network of ...

  4. Genre studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genre_studies

    e. Genre studies is an academic subject which studies genre theory as a branch of general critical theory in several different fields, including art, literature, linguistics, rhetoric and composition studies. Literary genre studies is a structuralist approach to the study of genre and genre theory in literary theory, film theory, and other ...

  5. Structuralist Poetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuralist_Poetics

    Structuralist Poetics. Structuralist Poetics: Structuralism, Linguistics and the Study of Literature is a 1975 book of critical literary theory by the critic Jonathan Culler. First published by Routledge & Kegan Paul, [1] it won the James Russell Lowell Prize from the Modern Language Association of America in 1976 for an outstanding book of ...

  6. Structural linguistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_linguistics

    Structural linguistics, or structuralism, in linguistics, denotes schools or theories in which language is conceived as a self-contained, self-regulating semiotic system whose elements are defined by their relationship to other elements within the system. [1][2] It is derived from the work of Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure and is part of ...

  7. Structural approach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_approach

    The structural approach is a technique wherein the learner masters the pattern of sentence. Structures are the different arrangements of words in one accepted style or the other. It includes various modes in which clauses, phrases or word might be used. It is based on the assumptions that language can be best learnt through a scientific ...

  8. Post-structuralism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-structuralism

    Post-structuralism is a philosophical movement that questions the objectivity or stability of the various interpretive structures that are posited by structuralism and considers them to be constituted by broader systems of power. [1] Although post-structuralists all present different critiques of structuralism, common themes among them include ...

  9. Structuralist theory of mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuralist_theory_of...

    Furthermore, a structural approach should account for all versions of a myth, as all versions are relevant to the function of the myth as a whole. This leads to what Lévi-Strauss calls a spiral growth of the myth that is continuous while the structure itself is not. The growth of the myth only ends when the “intellectual impulse which has ...