A Mixture of Saussure and Barthes towards “The Eiffel Tower”
After Friday’s class on the discussion of Saussure, I am slowly getting the concept of signified and signifier. Language in general, is confusing. We have all these literary devices and elements in writing that enhances a work, but it also can confuse readers. Saussure, in a way, is talking about onomatopoeia because we say things that we actually do not realize because we are already accustomed to it.
For example, when we were talking about bees making buzz noises, we are adjusted to the sound and not the actual word ‘buzz.’ After the discussion, I was starting to think about that plus the part about where chess falls into the ‘signified/signifier’ category because of how moves and rules are have different standards in the game. It is just like the Eiffel Tower.
Roland Barthes talks about how the Eiffel Tower is a well-known landmark in Paris but how it is not really special in someone’s life. This true, well at least towards the Parisians, because they live and see the landmark everyday of their lives. According to Barthes, it can be seen anywhere in Paris, causing the landmark to be insignificant to that part of the world, but to the rest of the world it is magnificent. That then brings me back to the animal noises.
Barthes, at one point brings up, the signified/signifier concept into his writing. I believe Saussure made ‘signified/signifier’ complicated in his writing. After reading Barthes’ reading, I am somewhat getting this part of the English language. The part I do not know in Barthes’ reading is why does he talk about other objects being useless and insignificant. Just because the Eiffel Tower is considered famous to the world, it does not mean that everything around it is less than it. Then again, Barthes also talks about how the tower itself is useless because the creators of this monument did not intend for it to mean anything. This is where the reading goes from starting to head in the right direction to a 360 degree right back to confusion.
In English, I see in my opinion, that authors usually have similar ideas but have different ways of showing it. The Eiffel Tower is and will continue to be a significant landmark throughout the world. Just after reading this writing, Saussure and Barthes make very interesting points that are related to the landmark. Though this reading is a way to change your mind about everything now, I do not think most people will change their minds about how beautiful and magnificent the Eiffel Tower is to how the landmark is not significant at all.


