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structuralism
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structuralism

20th-century philosophical movement that has influenced such areas as linguistics, anthropology, and literary criticism. Inspired by the work of the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, structuralists believe that objects should be analysed as systems of relations, rather than as positive entities.

Saussure proposed that language is a system of arbitrary signs, meaning that there is no intrinsic link between the ‘signifier’ (the sound or mark) and the ‘signified’ (the concept it represents). Hence any linguistic term can only be defined by its differences from other terms. His ideas were taken further by Roman Jakobson (1896–1982) and the Prague school of linguistics, and were extended into a general method for the social sciences by the French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss. The French writer Roland Barthes took the lead in applying the ideas of structuralism to literary criticism, arguing that the critic should identify the structures within a text that determine its possible meanings, independently of any reference to the real. This approach is radicalized in Barthes's later work and in the practice of ‘deconstruction’, pioneered by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida. Here the text comes to be viewed as a ‘decentred’ play of structures, lacking any ultimately determinable meaning.



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Everett writes simply and persuasively about language, but he lacks the wit and felicitous gift for analogy that enables someone like Pinker to bring structural linguistics to life.
However, averse to traditional notional definitions, the instructors preferred structuralist definitions much like Lester (345) By borrowing methodologies from structural linguistics for teaching parts of speech we have created a slightly different kind of traditional grammar--a slightly less traditional, traditional grammar.
Diller, Karl 1971 Generative grammar, structural linguistics and language teaching.
 
 
 
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