Ed White is Associate Professor in the Department of English, University of Florida at Gainesville. He is the author of The Backcountry and the City: Colonization and Conflict in Early America (2005) and co-editor of Beyond Douglass: New Perspectives on Early African American Literature (2008).
Introduction
1. The Photographic Message
2. The Rhetoric of the Image
3. The Third Meaning
4. Diderot, Brecht, Eisenstein
5. Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narrative
6. The Struggle with the Angel
7. The Death of the Author
8. Musica Practica
9. From Work to Text
10. Change the Object Itself
11. Lesson in Writing
12. The Grain of the Voice
13. Writers, Intellectuals, Teachers
Index
Roland Barthes is one of the most influential cultural theorists of the postwar period and Image-Music-Text collects his most influential essays. Ed White provides students with a clear guide to this essential but difficult text.
As students are increasingly expected to write across a range of media, Barthes' work can be understood as an early mapping of what we now call interdisciplinary or multidisciplinary study. The book's detailed section-by-section readings makes Barthes' most important writings accessible to undergraduate readers.
This book is a perfect companion for teaching and learning Barthes' ideas in cultural studies and literary theory.