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| Best Sellers Rank | #216,855 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #522 in Photography Books #865 in Linguistics (Books) #1,301 in Music Books |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (176) |
| Dimensions | 19.71 x 1.5 x 12.9 cm |
| ISBN-10 | 0006861350 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0006861355 |
| Importer | Atlantic Publishers and Distributors (P) Ltd., 7/22, Ansari Road, Darya Ganj, New Delhi - 110002 INDIA, Email – [email protected], Ph – 011-47320500 |
| Item Weight | 160 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 224 pages |
| Publication date | 13 September 1993 |
| Publisher | Fontana Press |
T**N
Five Stars
Great Book
P**I
Essential book for reference.
None.
V**N
A great book
It’s really wonderful
H**P
If you're looking for solid theory on advertising, the media, photography, and literature then you've come to the right theorist. Roland Barthes work is approachable in a way that Derrida and Foucault just isn't - or maybe that's just me. 'Image, Music, Text' is a collection of Barthes essays covering everything from the photographic message, to the rhetoric of the image, and his famous essay the Death of the Author. If you need to write an academic essay or paper on pretty much any area of contemporary culture then this book is invaluable. Now I'd better get back to writing my theoretic framework for my PhD....
D**R
Roland Barthes is a great writer, the various essays are concise, technical but without leaving the less technical reader lost. There is actually a lot to enjoy and I find as an artist Barthes insights inspire me to think about images in new ways while also giving insight into other arts like music and text. I would like to read more by Barthes in the future.
J**R
Like so much of this author's work, I profit from it although I don't accept his premises. The writing is very hifalutin and abstract. It's not easy to figure out his meaning with all the abstract terms. Still he makes some great points. He uses a term - censorship through repletion - that I have never encountered elsewhere. I understand this to mean that there is so much worthless discourse that information has no audience. I find this an apt term for present US media. Our world is falling apart and the news is about Game of Thrones. The sea is rising and we worry about whether a favorite TV show will be canceled or which new toy is better, the a-phone or the b-phone. I prefer reading old books to new. Somehow Barthes seems like an old-timer in this equation. He's part of the tradition of making real points although he's not that ancient.
O**G
A great read
N**E
terrible reproduction I assume a pirate edition no legitimate publisher would put this out.
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