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On
Christian Doctrine
St.
Augustine is accepted as the first linguist
theorist. Through he was not born Christian;
he adopted Christianity, later on introduced
himself as the most significant Christian
thinker after St. Paul.
He
is a neo- Platonist because he believes
in two worlds; world of god and world
of human being.
The
essay “On Christian Doctrine”
brings Augustine to the attention of
modern semioticians and literary theorists.
For him, signs are things used to signify
something and words are things, the
whole use of which is signification.
For him all signs are things, not all
things are signs.
A
sign is important because it points
to something else and that something
else is ultimately for Augustine the
trinity of father, son and Holy Ghost.
The Value of sign therefore is not pleasurable
in itself but rather in its use in the
movement of signification towards God.
However signs cannot embody God because
God is too great to be described in
words. So in the middle age, Bible was
claimed to be holding the primary of
religious teaching so reading and understanding
Bible is reaching near to the truth.
Augustine
takes signs as the basic element of
language. Sign is always referential
since it stands for other. He classifies
signs as natural and conventional.
Natural signs are universal so are unchangeable,
e.g. smoke signifies five but conventional
signs are the result of cultural construction
which are prevalent in certain culture
e.g. ‘sindur’ is a conventional
sign that represents married Hindu women.
Conventional signs are to be enjoyed
because it is the human product. He
prefers those signs, which are applicable
in day-to-day language and are enjoyable
at the same time but the signs, which
are intended only to be enjoyed, create
confusion.
There
are two reasons why things written are
not understood: they are obscured either
by unknown or by ambiguous signs.
Signs are either literal or figurative.
Literal signs do have single meaning
whereas, figurative signs occur when
that thing which we designate by a literal
sign is used to signify something else.
E.g.; bos(ox) has two meanings one is
animal, another it refers to an evangelist.
Such figurative signs are also called
allegory, which Augustine prefers.
According to the Holy Scripture, the
leading of Christianity involves faith,
the hope and charity. Charity led by
faith and hope is the grater goal of
Christianity. Augustine believes that
if one has the access over Bible, obeys
and endures god, he/she can easily reach
closer to god.
Thus, for Augustine literature, which
helps to put near to trinity, is welcome.
According to him, trinity is the ultimate
truth and we can reach up to the truth
by the language; the greatest language,
which is available in holy Bible in
which words of God are recorded, therefore
it is known to be Holy Scripture.
Victor
Shklovsky Victor
Shklovosky, a founder of the OPAYAZ
group in Russia, occupies a significant
position in Russian Formalism by introducing
his literary concept of art as technique,
thereby making the notion of defamiliarization
as a central tenet of the Russian Formalism.His
emphasis lies on the exploration of
new literary techniques and devices
in a work of art for its renewed perception
and literariness. Read
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Jan
Mukarosky Jan
Mukarovsky a member of Prague school
of structural linguistic has formulated
his basic literary idea of foregrounding
by introducing two types of language:
standard language and poetic Language.The
standard language to Mukarovsky is the
language of everyday communication so
it is a rule bound, practical and automatized.
The poetic language, on the other hand
is a deviated use of the standards language
where the differences are fore- grounded.
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Roman
Jakobson Roman
Jackson, first one of the leading members
of Russian formalism and then a founder
of the Prague School of Linguistics,
stands as a link between formalism and
structuralism. He is such a literary
theorist whose approach is essentially
that of a linguist.His famous piece
of essay “Thee Aspects of Language
and Two Types of Aphasic Disturbances”
is a seminal text in structural analysis
as developed by Ferdinand de Saussure.
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Boris
Eichenbaum Eichenbaum
is one of the great members of Russian
Formalism who tried to systematize formalist
principle to set up a theory. Eichenbaum
tries to employ scientific procedures
and establish Formalism, a scientific
theory. For the science of literature,
both independent and factual methods
are needed. He however agrees with the
opponents that, in Formalism, there
is no strict methodology. He says that
Russian Formalism is not dogmatic but
it is a historical summation. The theory
is valued only as a working hypothesis.
He says that he is not concerned with
definitions nor does he intend to argue
formalist position.
Read
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