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On Literary Practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Philippe de Lajarte*
Affiliation:
Université de Caen

Extract

To select as the subject of a study of limited size a topic as fundamental and, additionally, one so long discussed as has been the case with literary practice greatly risks—and we are fully aware of this—appearing to be an undertaking which is both presumptuous (how many studies, sometimes major ones, have been devoted to this question during recent decades?) and doomed to failure (is it serious to presume, in a few pages, to deal, even partially, with so vast and so complex a subject?). However, one precise reason causes us to think that it is time, today, to re-examine this ancient problem in new terms. The field of French literary research is at present characterized by a major institutional and ideological fact, the massive reality of which certain particular or collective efforts, no matter how remarkable these might be, cannot cover over. An airtight seal continues to separate, globally, traditional literary research from recent studies produced by certain linguists and speech historians in the domain of linguistic practices. Whence this scientifically paradoxical consequence: studies dealing with fundamentally similar objects—discursive practices—are presently being conducted in parallel, on the basis of theoretical premises which are radically opposed in most cases, with each one almost absolutely ignorant of the others. This situation, we believe, is exceedingly harmful to literary research. By making all interdisciplinary relation impossible as well as inhibiting certain questioning necessary within the realm of this research, it contributes to blocking progress in large measure. Need we point out that we nourish no naive hopes of overturning within the space of a few pages a situation whose roots, both institutional and ideological, are so deep? Nor does one distinguish oneself more by providing definitive answers for these basic problems which we propose discussing here, answers which one might even believe possible to guarantee as fully correct. We would only like to attempt to prove, by re-examining in new terms some fundamental problems of literary theory, the advantage which this theory might be able to find in certain data drawn from linguistics and the “analysis of discourse”, and inversely to propose certain theoretical readjustments which a specific reflection on literary practice seems to make necessary in the field of these two disciplines, particularly in that of the second. The pages which follow should, therefore, only be taken for what they are: an attempt, limited in its scope and problematic in its conclusions, to break down some barriers and to open a breach at certain critical points.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1984 Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP)

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References

1 We are thinking in particular, in the French sector, of efforts undertaken by the reviews Littérature and Poétique.

2 By the generic expression "analysis of discourse", I mean here the research and work issued from two horizons which are different but nevertheless convergent by their target and their results. In the first place the studies done by linguists on the corpus created by the various categories of discourse (political, legal, religious, etc.), studies which aim at defining the specificity of discourses by the analysis and the correlation of their different structural levels (syntactical, lexical, semantic, pragma tic). These studies are all inspired by the theory and the method defined in the 1950's by the American linguist Zellig S. Harris. In the French sector there can be found diverse illustrations in many issues of the review Langages (especially in issues No. 13, 23, 37, 41 and 52) and in several works such as those by M. Pêcheux (Les Vérités de la Palice, Paris, Maspero, 1975) and P. Henry (Le Mauvais Outil, Paris, Klincksieck, 1977). But with the expression "analysis of discourse" I also mean the masterful studies by M. Foucault of the discourses in the so-called "human" sciences (Les Mots et les choses, l'Archéologie du savoir, L'Ordre du discours), decisive studies in that to them is owed the conception, for the first time clearly defined and rigorously analyzed, of discourses as social practices (on this notion see note 3).

3 Like many others, I am borrowing this notion from M. Foucault who defines it as follows: "What is called ‘discursive practice' can now be defined. It cannot be confused with the expressive operation by which an individual formulates an idea, a desire, an image; nor with the rational activity which can be used in a system of inference; nor with the ‘competence' of a speaking subject when he forms grammat ical phrases; it is an ensemble of anonymous historical rules, always determined in time and space, which have defined for a given epoch, and for a given social, economic, geographic or linguistic realm, the conditions for the exercise of the enunciative function." (L'Archéologie du savoir, Paris, Gallimard, 1969, p. 153-154).

4 I hope I will be pardoned this expression which smacks somewhat of jargon, preferred here to the more traditional one of work, loaded with ideological implica tions, certain ones of which (and I will explain why later) seem to me to be a little suspicious. For the meaning given to this expression see below § IV.

5 A notion which I am borrowing once more from M. Foucault who defined it thus: the "[discursive] formation systems… are not constraints which had their origin in the thinking of men nor in the play of their representations; nor are they determinations which, formed at the level of institutions or social relations or of the economy, would be transcribed by force at the surface of discourses. These systems —and we have already stressed this—reside in the discourse itself […] By formation system should be understood a complex network of relations which function as a norm. […] To define a formation system in its particular individuality is thus to characterize a discourse or a group of statements by the regularity of a practice" (L'Archéologie du savoir, pp. 97-98).

6 We are here referring principally to the works of D. Slakta, particularly to L'Ordre du texte (Etudes de linguistique appliquée, No. 19, 1975), and to Sémiologie et Grammaire de texte, 1980, Parix X (to appear)—which have, it seems to us, given distinction to these two orders for which E. Benveniste was the first to establish with clarity (see Problèmes de linguistique générale II, chapter III) most rigorous theoreti cal status.

7 By structure of a discourse, we mean principally the following elements: specific positions for subjects, certain formal structures (narratives, arguments, etc.) proper to the statements, a semantic structure, an ensemble of references, a system of norms, a specific secondary semiotic functioning and intertextual functioning.

8 Cf. especially H.R. Jauss, Pour une esthétique de la réception, Paris, Clallimard, 1978 (French translation).

9 Cf. K. Stierle, "Identité du discours et transgression lyrique", Poétique 32, 1977, p. 426.

10 Cf. E.W. Bruss, "L'autobiographie considérée comme acte littéraire, Poétique 17, 1974.

11 "Any literary notion referring to the inner unity of a work […] is null and void, given the theoretical presuppositions which we have recalled earlier". (M. Pêcheux and C. Fuchs, "Mises au point et perspectives à propos de l'analyse automatique du discours", Langages 37, March 1975, p. 28).

12 Cf. art. cit.

13 Cf. T. Todorov, "La notion de littérature", Les Genres du Discours, Paris, Seuil, 1978.

14 We are thinking evidently of the Méditations, of the Harmonies poétiques et religieuses, of La Chute d'un Ange by Lamartine, of the Destinées of Vigny, and of many collections of Hugo, in particular Les Contemplations, Dieu, La Fin de Satan, etc.

15 Cf. R. Barthes, "Le discours de l'Histoire", Information sur le sciences so ciales, VI, 4, 1967.

16 Here we can once again recall the importance of religious inspiration in French poetry of the 16th century, from Marot's Psaumes (1541) to Sponde's Sonnets sur la Mort (1588).

17 Relations which are illustrated, each in its own way, by two works which are otherwise as diverse as Discours by Ronsard and Tragiques by Aubigné.

18 Ronsard, Hymne de l'Automne.

19 Ibid.

20 L. Althusser, "Idéologie et appareils idéologiques d'État", La Pensée, No. 151, 1970.