Friday, May 31, 2019
Art - A Culturally Constructed Myth :: American Culture Essays
Art - A Culturally Constructed MythThe development of semiotics in the 20th cytosine revealed much about ideology in mass culture. Structuralist Roland Barthes texts on the matter are very much products of their times, yet many still have a troubling modern-day relevance. Barthes Mythologies demonstrates the possibilty to find meaning through the trivia of everyday life. He claims to want to challenge the innoncence and naturalness of cultural texts and practices, as they are capable of producing a wad of supplementary meanings, or connotations.Although objects, gestures and practices have a certain utilitarian function, they are not resistant to the imposition of meaning. Barthes wants to suspend consideration of function, and concentrate rather on what things mean and how they function as signs. Mythologies is a study of the ways in which mass culture constructs this mythological reality and encourages conformity to its own values.Barthes analysis of signs reveals that in that l ocation are very few innoncent objects, that al nigh everything is coded (assigned meaning). Barthes arrives at this conclusion based on his theory of myth that a form (expanded from Saussures sound-image, which was limited to linguistics) and a plan create mythologies sign systems that render one dominant meaning (or signification). For the receiver, this signification arrives automatically and smoothly, thus seemingly denying the intentional re-coding. Barthes believes that this constant creation of myth is how a culture invents its beliefs and narratives, and is able to find meaning in the world.This premise draws a particular parallel in our contemporary society for it is my hypothesis that our culture today locates meaning through mythological art (whether fine, commercial, popular, industrial etc.). Has art truly become myth?In order to read or deconstruct myth, Barthes suggests, one must(prenominal) (1) accept the myth as a cultural construction, thus emptying its meaning (2) rear the myth as full, identifying all manageable signs and significations and finally (3) concede the signifier as both empty and full, capable of signifying many things, yet with only one clear, dominant meaning. It is my argument that such a deconstruction crapper render art as myth.Having realized art as a structured cultural phenomenon, and having emptied its direct and apparent meaning, it is possible to identify all its possible significations. Interestingly enough, I find that art reveals many diametrically opposed significations expression and oppression, bias and acceptance, individual and society, creativity and confinement, and freedom and convention, among others. Art signifies the de-politicization of our culture, for even the most political of pieces cease to cause a stir among the masses.
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