Friday, October 25, 2019
Author-function :: Reading Literature Essays
Author-function       In the second chapter of his book The Order of Books, Roger Chartier deconstructs the way that past and present readers think of authors of texts.  He uses Foucaultââ¬â¢s term ââ¬Å"author-function,â⬠ which Foucault used in his famous essay ââ¬Å"What is an Author?,â⬠ to describe this concept.     ââ¬Å"Author-functionâ⬠ is an elusive term.  In essence, it refers to the way that a readerââ¬â¢s concept of the "author" functions in his reading of a text.  His interpretation of a text is shaped by his understanding of its author.  Without any concept of who the author of a text is, it is easy to develop many different interpretations of that text.  However, in light of an authorââ¬â¢s gender, ethnicity, time period, political leanings, or other applicable known information, the text often leans toward one plausible interpretation.  For example, a readerââ¬â¢s interpretation of Invisible Man is greatly colored by her knowledge of its author Ralph Ellison as a black man fighting racial discrimination.  Her interpretation of the same novel would be quite different if the author was really a white person with a history of racist action.  Modern readers rely heavily on their knowledge of a textââ¬â¢s author, often without realizing it, to shape their interpretations    of that text.     Necessary to a more complete understanding of the concept of author-function is an understanding of the social function of authors through the ages which Chartier lays out in ââ¬Å"Figures of the Author.â⬠  Chartier agrees with Foucault, an influential literary theorist who claims that the author-function changed in the 19th century when copyright laws were established.  With these new laws, ââ¬Å"a system of ownership came into being . . . strict rules concerning authorââ¬â¢s rights, author-publisher relations, rights of reproduction, and related matters were enactedâ⬠ (qtd. in Chartier 30).  In other words, with copyright laws, the author was seen as the source of information and was given credit (and money) for that information.  Chartier agrees that author-function did change with these changing ideas of information as property, but he claims that the idea of the author-function is older and broader.     According to Chartier, there is evidence that the author served a functional role in the reading of texts in Medieval Europe (31, 59).  Foucault acknowledges that in the Middle Ages, anonymous authorship of ââ¬Å"literaryâ⬠ texts was common, while the veracity of scientific texts was judged by the authority of the textââ¬â¢s author (31).  					    
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