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Enunciative subject
المؤلف:
Bronwen Martin and Felizitas Ringham
المصدر:
Dictionary of Semiotics
الجزء والصفحة:
P57
2025-05-28
246
Enunciative subject
In semiotic analysis we distinguish between the enunciator of an utterance and the enunciatee to whom it is addressed. In conversation, two interlocutors take part in an intersubjective exchange, in turn advancing propositions and accepting or rejecting them. On the surface level, therefore, enunciator and enunciatee adopt distinctly different positions: one asking to be believed, the other conferring belief or withholding it. On a deeper level, however, the different participants in the exchange come together in one syncretic figure representing the enunciative performance in its entirety. It is in this context that we talk of the subject of enunciation, or the enunciative subject, which comprises both proposition and acceptance or rejection, like two sides of a whole glued by their fiduciary relation. On the discursive level, this unity is illustrated by, for instance, the syncretism manifest in the expression 'He believed in himself.
See also enunciator/enunciatee and epistemological subject.
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