Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique

This study aims, on the one hand, to examine the conditions of emergence of two recently created disciplines, both of which are in line with the epistemological mutation of the increasing interest for spatiality in the humanities — urban semiotics, of semiological allegiance, and geocriticism, of li...

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Main Author: Nathalie Roelens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université de liège 2014-12-01
Series:Signata
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/signata/485
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spelling doaj-eb675c17247e435d8c189a3a9def2c612020-11-25T03:40:42ZengUniversité de liègeSignata2032-98062014-12-01517319810.4000/signata.485Sémiotique urbaine et géocritiqueNathalie RoelensThis study aims, on the one hand, to examine the conditions of emergence of two recently created disciplines, both of which are in line with the epistemological mutation of the increasing interest for spatiality in the humanities — urban semiotics, of semiological allegiance, and geocriticism, of literary obedience — and, on the other hand, to evaluate the appropriateness of finding a common ground between these two. After retracing the genealogy of both approaches, a conceptual coalescence and common fields of application have been found for the two methodologies. Indeed, in spite of the different perspectives and objects of analysis (uses and practice for semiotics, texts and myths for geocriticism), they seem to share a common episteme, that is, the rootedness of the subject within an environment that he is supposed to invest with meaning in order to make it habitable. However, this world that spatially surrounds the subject does not necessarily coincide with the tangible world of reality. The thorny issue of a new referentialist paradigm in literature that takes over from an autotelic, immanentist approach is counterbalanced by the necessary consideration of the place imaginary, which challenges every kind of localisation and inventorisation on a map. The two approaches seem nevertheless to have arrived at a sufficient degree of maturity to exchange concepts and work in conjunction with one another. This synergy could be profitable to the humanities, suffering from a lack of legitimacy in a context of excessive relativism, and amidst a world in which urban reality and the conditions of the habitable are experiencing great changes.http://journals.openedition.org/signata/485spaceliterary theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nathalie Roelens
spellingShingle Nathalie Roelens
Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
Signata
space
literary theory
author_facet Nathalie Roelens
author_sort Nathalie Roelens
title Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
title_short Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
title_full Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
title_fullStr Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
title_full_unstemmed Sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
title_sort sémiotique urbaine et géocritique
publisher Université de liège
series Signata
issn 2032-9806
publishDate 2014-12-01
description This study aims, on the one hand, to examine the conditions of emergence of two recently created disciplines, both of which are in line with the epistemological mutation of the increasing interest for spatiality in the humanities — urban semiotics, of semiological allegiance, and geocriticism, of literary obedience — and, on the other hand, to evaluate the appropriateness of finding a common ground between these two. After retracing the genealogy of both approaches, a conceptual coalescence and common fields of application have been found for the two methodologies. Indeed, in spite of the different perspectives and objects of analysis (uses and practice for semiotics, texts and myths for geocriticism), they seem to share a common episteme, that is, the rootedness of the subject within an environment that he is supposed to invest with meaning in order to make it habitable. However, this world that spatially surrounds the subject does not necessarily coincide with the tangible world of reality. The thorny issue of a new referentialist paradigm in literature that takes over from an autotelic, immanentist approach is counterbalanced by the necessary consideration of the place imaginary, which challenges every kind of localisation and inventorisation on a map. The two approaches seem nevertheless to have arrived at a sufficient degree of maturity to exchange concepts and work in conjunction with one another. This synergy could be profitable to the humanities, suffering from a lack of legitimacy in a context of excessive relativism, and amidst a world in which urban reality and the conditions of the habitable are experiencing great changes.
topic space
literary theory
url http://journals.openedition.org/signata/485
work_keys_str_mv AT nathalieroelens semiotiqueurbaineetgeocritique
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