Monday, September 4, 2017

Three Worded Paragraphs (Journal Entry 5)

Barthes shares his opinion on rhetoric and the different views he has on the multiple ways people use language.

When I think of reading, I only really think of the book series that I read multiple times over. The ones that I have grown feelings for and accustomed to. I am not sure if I want Barthes to change how I read them if I have grown so attached, but I understand where he is coming from. That every time you read something, look at all the perspectives; not of the characters, but of the readers' and the author. How the author put themselves in the book, or withheld a bit. I suppose the next time I want to cry and read Percy Jackson,  shouldn't pay so much attention to the story, but to what the words are saying? Yeah, the deep stuff.

Paragraph 1:

  • Well-spoken
  • Blacken
  • Pure
Paragraph 2:
  • Pleasure
  • Grammarian
  • Change of code
  • Lexicographical 
Paragraph 3:
  • Selective baffles
  • Lost
  • Always the other, the author
Paragraph 4:
  • Disposessed
  • I desire the author
  • Prattle 
Paragraph 5:
  • Ideological
  • Every fiction is supported by a social jargon
  • Sacerdotal
Paragraph 6:
  • Regionality
  • Agents of the State
  • It is a warrior
Paragraph 7:
  • Paranoias
  • Jargon
  • Marxist
Paragraph 8:
  • Systems
  • Us
  • Inhabit
Paragraph 9: 
  • Atopia 
  • War of languages
  • Dissociated 
Paragraph 10:
  • Erethism 
  • Desquamation 
  • Writers hackles 
Paragraph 11:
  • Outside languages
  • Not a language
  • War of fictions

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