“All texts are, always, to various degrees, contradictory, multifarious, polysemic. This is not license for epistemological anarchy, according to which anything, any reading, always goes. But it is to acknowledge that no next, whatever its author's (or reader's) intent, can have a simple, singular meaning. Every text will generate something like a tangle of meanings and connotations, more or less concentrated around a core, more or less protean or stable, according to political, social and linguistic context. As one playful formulation has it, rather than being straightforwardly 'about' something in particular, every text is inevitably surrounded by a 'vibrating aboutness cluster'. The context, content and range of that cluster must be accounted for as part of an analysis. Some writers in some situations may strain against rhetorical shenanigans, for example striving for the specificity of logical notation: the cluster of reasonable meanings of such texts may well thus be less diffuse than for those which, say, revel in pun and performance. But a text with one 'true' meaning is a chimera. Analysis is not closure, but an attempt to discern reasonable meaning(s) close to the core of that cluster, and to contest those that range too far from it.”
Quote by China Miéville
Author
You May Also Like
Source: De wetten
Source: Of Human Bondage
Source: Fahrenheit 451
“True, we might form classes in thinking and reading.”
Source: Fahrenheit 451
“…and for goodness’ sake read widely and deeply…”
Source: By Night in Chile
“Shakespeare should never be a duty.”
Source: The Friendly Shakespeare: A Thoroughly Painless Guide to the Best of the Bard
“You can read, Kya. There will never be a time again when you can’t read.”
Source: Where the Crawdads Sing
Source: A Gentleman in Moscow