Abstract

A funny thing happened to me on my way home from the semiotics seminar. As rounded a corner on C floor of the library, noticed an advertisement from the New York Times pasted on the door of a student's carrel: Primed by a discussion of Charles S. Peirce and the theory of signs, immediately recognized it as -well, a sign. Its message was clear enough: you could fly to Fiji and back for $499. But its meaning was different. It was a joke, aimed at the university public by a student grinding away at a thesis in the middle of winter, and it seemed to say: I want to out of this place. Give me some air! Sun! Mehr Licht! You could add many glosses. But to the joke, you would have to know that carrels are cells where students work on theses, that theses require long spells of hard labor, and that winter in Princeton closes around the students like a damp shroud. In a word, you would have to know your way around the campus culture, no great feat if you live in the midst of it, but something that distinguishes the inmates of carrels from the civilian population gamboling about in sunshine and fresh air. To us, $499 is funny. To you, it may seem sophomoric. To me, it raised a classic academic question: how do symbols work? The question had been worrying me in connection with some criticism of a book had published in 1984, The Great Cat Massacre and Other Episodes of French Cultural History. In the book had tried to show why a ritual slaughter of cats was hilariously funny to a group of journeymen printers in Paris around 1730. By getting the joke, had hoped to get a key element in artisanal culture and to understand the play of symbols in cultural history in general. My critics raised some questions, which clung to $499 in my thoughts as trudged home through the dark. would like to discuss those questions, not as a rebuttal to the criticism, for still think my argument stands, but as an informal way of wandering through some general problems concerning the historical interpretation of symbols, rituals, and texts. In a long review of The Great Cat Massacre, Roger Chartier argues that the book is flawed by a faulty notion of symbols. ' According to him, symbolism

Highlights

  • To get the joke, you would have to know that carrels are cells where students workon theses, thattheses requirelong spells of hardlabor, andthatwinter in Princetoncloses aroundthe studentslike a dampshroud

  • I do not thinka sophisticatedwriterlike Fureti6recan serve as a "native informant"aboutthe conceptionof symbolism amongilliterate workingpeople

  • As Michael Herzfeld puts it, "Symbols do not stand for fixed equivalences but forcontextually comprehensibleanalogies."2Inhis workamongGreekpeasants, Herzfeld found that symbols signified many things, most of them unexpected andall of themimpenetrableto anyonewho could not pick his way throughthe multiple associations attachedto crows, crocuses, pebbles, and otherobjects in the local culture

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Summary

Published Version Citable link Terms of Use

Darnton, Robert. 1986. The symbolic element in history. Journal of Modern History 58(1): 218-234. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/242949 http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:3403043 This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-ofuse#LAA

Princeton University
Poison Dry
House Sister Pet
House Cats
Pet cats
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