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#Post#: 65--------------------------------------------------
Tero de la Rosa and his RGB LED flash
By: kkshaha cnd Date: September 12, 2023, 5:32 am
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Whoever has been lucky enough to read the Complete Works of
Roland Barthes1, magnificently edited by Éric Marty, cannot help
but fall in love with an intellectual trajectory that is
intimidating due to its lucidity and heterogeneity. In fact,
perhaps it is above all this last aspect – heterogeneity – that
is its main attraction. And it seems that this is what makes
writing his biography an extremely difficult task.
How could it not be to narrate an Phone Number List
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life of almost 40 years, characterized
by positions as radical and subtle as they were contradictory on
the tensions between literature, politics and life of the 20th
century . Perhaps only a writer like Tiphaine Samoyault – an
academic, critic and narrator trained in Barthesian thought –
could have accepted a challenge of that magnitude without
disappointing. His biography of Roland Barthes , published in
France in 2015 and now published in Spanish in a very consistent
translation2, is extraordinary: a portrait that balances the
lucidity and originality of the influential intellectual and the
intimacy of the elegant and worldly character.
[img]
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Samoyault dedicates approximately 100 of the almost 800 pages of
the book to understanding one of Barthes' most enigmatic
periods, that of the end of his life; the Barthes who was
tenaciously pursuing his last wish – to write a novel – when he
was hit by a dry cleaner's van on the rue des Écoles, on
February 25, 1980.3. Barthes was preparing to cross the street
to enter the Collège de France. The preparation of the novel was
the last seminar he gave in that pantheon of the French
intellectual world.
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