L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie

Idiorrythmy, term that Barthes borrows from the religious vocabulary of the monasteries and which meets his « fantasy of collective loneliness », of a compromise between retreat and involvement, is, in our view, in embryonic form from the first essays and underlies all Barthes’ writings. Indeed, amo...

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Main Author: Nathalie Roelens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association Portugaise d'Etudes Françaises 2016-01-01
Series:Carnets
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/805
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spelling doaj-a2cff17770bb499aa6d52cb2dafa887f2020-11-25T02:28:06ZengAssociation Portugaise d'Etudes FrançaisesCarnets1646-76982016-01-01610.4000/carnets.805L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmieNathalie RoelensIdiorrythmy, term that Barthes borrows from the religious vocabulary of the monasteries and which meets his « fantasy of collective loneliness », of a compromise between retreat and involvement, is, in our view, in embryonic form from the first essays and underlies all Barthes’ writings. Indeed, amongst the profusion of literary and philosophical metaphors recalled to fight against myth, arrogance, alibi and doxa, idiorrythmy plays a special part. As a critical instrument it spurs to writing, against and together with the tendency to take refuge in the neutral or the haiku, and underlines the urgency of praxis: « to battle, to invest, to plant » (Barthes, 2003: 30), even and especially at the edge of idiomaticity, singularity, madness: as an assumption of a style and a thought by a Barthes as a hermit, an idiot, an epicure, a philosopher.http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/805idiorrythmymetaphorwritingneutralityhaiku
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nathalie Roelens
spellingShingle Nathalie Roelens
L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
Carnets
idiorrythmy
metaphor
writing
neutrality
haiku
author_facet Nathalie Roelens
author_sort Nathalie Roelens
title L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
title_short L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
title_full L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
title_fullStr L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
title_full_unstemmed L’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
title_sort l’envergure et l’avenir de l’idiorrythmie
publisher Association Portugaise d'Etudes Françaises
series Carnets
issn 1646-7698
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Idiorrythmy, term that Barthes borrows from the religious vocabulary of the monasteries and which meets his « fantasy of collective loneliness », of a compromise between retreat and involvement, is, in our view, in embryonic form from the first essays and underlies all Barthes’ writings. Indeed, amongst the profusion of literary and philosophical metaphors recalled to fight against myth, arrogance, alibi and doxa, idiorrythmy plays a special part. As a critical instrument it spurs to writing, against and together with the tendency to take refuge in the neutral or the haiku, and underlines the urgency of praxis: « to battle, to invest, to plant » (Barthes, 2003: 30), even and especially at the edge of idiomaticity, singularity, madness: as an assumption of a style and a thought by a Barthes as a hermit, an idiot, an epicure, a philosopher.
topic idiorrythmy
metaphor
writing
neutrality
haiku
url http://journals.openedition.org/carnets/805
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