One of the seminal contributions of Roland Barthes, a versatile literary and cultural critic and semiologist, was the poststructuralist distinction between two main types of texts roughly corresponding to nineteenth century realism and twentieth century experimental modernism. In his 1970 work S/Z in which he did a structural analysis of Balzac’s Sarrasine, Barthes formulated that the realist text, which is considered to be “transparent”, having a seemingly unitary meaning, invested by the author and easily accessible to the reader, is a “readerly” text, in which the reader is only a passive and inert consumer of the author’s product. On the contrary, the experimental text, which he calls the “writerly” text, requires the active participation of the reader in establishing the meaning of the text. Such a text is a site of resistance to stable signification and is characterised by differance and “aporia” or “deadlocks in understanding”, where meaning is constantly under erasure. That the text is a multidimensional space which can explode into multiplicity of meanings was anticipated in Barthes’ Writing Degree Zero (1953), where he endorses Sartre’s contention that writing is never innocent, that whether consciously or unconsciously, writing is an ideological act.
Barthes extends his defence of experimental literature in his
The shift of perspective from the author to the text that Barthes takes from the Russian Formalists is also central to Gerard Gennete’s narratology, Julia Kristeva’s poststructuralist theory of intertextuality, and Derrida’s postulation of the abandonment of the “transcendental signified”.
