Discourse Analysis as Sociocriticism: The Spanish Golden Age
By (Author) Antonio Gomez-Moriana
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
20th July 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literature: history and criticism
860.9
Paperback
192
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 13mm
In Discourse Analysis as Sociocriticism, Antonio Gomez-Moriana brilliantly applies contemporary literary theory to classical texts of the Spanish Golden Age, including Lazarillo de Tormes, Don Quijote, Tirso de Molinas Don Juan play, and Columbuss Diary.
Gomez-Moriana begins by affirming that Saussure had originally intended semiology as a study of signs in social life before proceeding to focus on the study of system and structure. Gomez-Moriana argues that the structuralists subsequently misread Saussure and focused on the synchrony of signs abstacted from the literary text rather than on the historical and social developments represented by philology, the field of study that sheds light on cultural history. In Discourse Analysis as Sociocriticism, Gomez-Moriana fuses history and semiotics.
Gomez-Morianas skillful handling of literary theory is matched by his thorough scholarship and excellent knowledge of history....Whether he is dealing with Foucault to discuss, for example, the changing criteria of verisimilitude in Occidental literary discourse, or with Greimass semantic expansion principle, or with Lejeunes notion of the autobiographical pact, or, for that matter, with any other issue of importance to his analysis of a specific text, it is clear that Gomez-Moriana has done his homework. Nicholas Spadaccini, University of Minnesota
Antonio Gomez-Moriana is professor of comparative literature at the University of Montreal and chair of Spanish and Latin American Studies at Simon Fraser University. He has published several books and articles in Spanish, German, English, and French on philology and social change, literary history, semiotics, and discourse analysis.