This essay extends the notion of 'the death of the author' to an analysis of forms. The Work is the physical product, the Text comes after the consumption of the Work, where the ideas can live on and mutate. It's almost cliche now to look at an artwork and talk about 'the text that surrounds it', but this idea is relatively new, and represents for many a transition from Structuralism to Post-Structuralism.
In this essay Barthes brings up 7 points that can be briefly summarized;
1) Method: Work is a thing, Text is a discourse
2) Genre: Work often identifies as genre, Text transcends genre
3) The Sign: Work = moderately symbolic, Text = radically symbolic
4) The Plurality: Work is often singular and always finite, Text is infinite
5) Filiation: Work has an author, the Text extends beyond the author
6) Reading: the Work is consumed, the Text keeps giving
7) Pleasure: Work = fascination/delight, Text = Utopian PleasureWhat we learn here is that what we mostly get from a cultural product isn't something that's extracted from it, as we may intuit, but something that becomes quite independent of the original thing itself.
Everything we've looked at this term is very well summarized in three videos by the rather brilliant Tom Nicholas
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