Dinesh

Dinesh club

Posted: 23 Nov 2016


Taken: 23 Nov 2016

0 favorites     1 comment    35 visits

See also...


Keywords

Excerpt
Phenomenology of Perception
Author
Merleau Ponty


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

Photo replaced on 23 Nov 2016
35 visits


On Reading & Writing -- Sartre quote

On  Reading & Writing -- Sartre quote
The requisite discussion of the relationship of the reader to the text could consist of a development of some key points of Sartre's study of literature. For example, Sartre contends in 'What is Literature?' that reading is neither a mechanical registering nor an impartial contemplation of marks printed on paper. Thus if one were to read each word of a text separately, its meaning would fail to emerge because the latter is not the sum of words but rather, the organic whole. Writing and reading are dialectically correlated and constitute the two moments of what is effectively a joint venture. In seeking to disclose some truth, the prose-writers embarks on a project of communication which requires the reader's participation for its realization. Only writing and reading together can bring it about that something as revealed, as a revelation is only such for someone. Consequently, the writer implicitly appeals for the reader's collaboration. In order to comply, the reader must go beyond a merely 'abstract consciousness' or what the writer is saying. Reading is therefore 'directed creation'; but the reader is free to reject the writer's appeal by refusing to take part. Such a refusal prevents the text from actually becoming a disclosure -- at least as far as that reader is concerned. As Sartre puts it, 'to write is thus both to disclose the world and to offer it as a task to the generosity of the reader.

Comments
 Dinesh
Dinesh club

The good things in life do not come only through the senses. Some of the most exhilarating experiences we undergo are generated inside the mind, triggered by information that challenges our ability to think, rather than from the use of sensory skills. As Sir Francis Bacon noted almost four hundred years ago, wonder – which is the seed of knowledge – is the reflection of the purest form of pleasure. Just as there are flow activities corresponding to every physical potential of the body, every mental operation is able to provide its own particular form of enjoyment.

Among the many intellectual pursuits available, reading is currently perhaps the most often mentioned flow activity around the world. . . Page 117
6 months ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.