To the linguistic inquiry associated with Benveniste and to the
current preoccupation with the nature of writing. Professor Laden
joins a more philosophical probing of the nature of the self. At
issue is how language serves the self and whether its role is one
of presentation, representation, or generation. The author argues
that the self in the works she analyzes comes to appear'' either as
a void or as a series of related verbal constructs never wholly
adequate or unified.
Originally published in 1987.
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