Steve Blackwell: As a minor follow-up to the detailed post
by Jim Twiggs this morning..., I'd like to draw attention to a still earlier
incarnation of the "Death of the Author" phenomenon. The 19th-Century
French psychologist/philosopher/critic Hippolyte Taine produced what I believe
was the primordial version of the author's death...
JM: What led me at first onto the dead author
theme were a couple of "marginal finds"*, in particular the first
chapter of Michael Wood's "The Magician's Doubts." His sentence about
Nabokov, itself ("He became a memory; disappeared into his name, rhyming
with `cough' "), is reminscent of Barthes 1968 essay. When I made
a comparison between a book as a life, and Nabokov's vision
of "cradle above an abyss," I must have remembered something in a
similar spirit extracted from Barthes's essay which I'd read a long time ago and
had it superseded by a different proposition, from "Le Plaisir du Texte." when,
if not authors, at least "editors" (!) were important to keep
reader-response sharp and to the point ( I'm stretching the idea, of
course).
I couldn't access any confirmation about another predecessor of Barthes',
at the time he wrote his essay, but it seems that in 1932 an American
writer named Joseph Warren Beach first mentioned "exit the author," in one
of his articles. I suppose that what he intended to demonstrate was unlike
what Barthes set down. Do you know about what he intended to demonstrate,
Steve?
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* Cf. Nab-L posting n.43, nov.2010