Michel foucault, The
Author Function (1970), Excerpt
From Foucault,
Michel "What is an Author?",
translation Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, In Language,
Counter-Memory, Practice. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1977.
pp.124-127.
In dealing with the "author" as a function of discourse, we must
consider the characteristics of a discourse that support this use and determine
its differences from other discourses. If we limit our remarks only to those
books or texts with authors, we can isolate four different features.
First, they are objects of appropriation; the form of property they have
become is of a particular type whose legal codification was accomplished some
years ago. It is important to notice, as well, that its status as property is
historically secondary to the penal code controlling its appropriation.
Speeches and books were assigned real authors, other than mythical or important
religious figures, only when the author became subject to punishment and to the
extent that his discourse was considered transgressive.
In our culture and undoubtably in others as well
discourse was not originally a thing, a product, or a possession, but an action
situated in a bipolar field of sacred and profane, lawful and unlawful,
religious and blasphemous. It was a gesture charged with risks before it became
a possession caught in a circuit of property values. But it was at the moment
when a system of ownership and strict copyright rules were established (toward
the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth century) that the transgressive properties always intrinsic to the act of
writing became the forceful imperative of literature. It is as if the author,
at the moment he was accepted into the social order of property which governs our
culture, was compensating for his new status by reviving the older bipolar
field of discourse in a systematic practice of transgression and by restoring
the danger of writing which, on another side, had been conferred the benefits
of property.
Secondly, the "author-function" is not universal or constant in
all discourse. Even within our civilization, the same types of texts have not
always required authors; there was a time when those texts which we now call
"literary" (stories, folk tales, epics and tragedies) were accepted,
circulated and valorized without any questions about
the identity of their author. Their anonymity was ignored because their real or
supposed age was a sufficient guarantee of their authenticity. Text, however,
that we now call "scientific" (dealing with cosmology and the
heavens, medicine or illness, the natural sciences or geography) were only
considered truthful during the Middle Ages if the name
of the author was indicated. Statements on the order of "Hippocrates
said..." or "Pliny tells us that..." were not merely formulas
for an argument based on authority; they marked a proven discourse. In the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, a totally new conception was developed
when scientific texts were accepted on their own merits and positioned within
an anonymous and coherent conceptual system of established truths and methods
of verification. Authentication no longer required reference to the individual
who had produced them; the role of the author disappeared as an index of truthfulness
and, where it remained as an inventor's name, it was merely to denote a
specific theorem or proposition, a strange effect, a property, a body, a group
of elements, or a pathological syndrome.
At the same time, however, "literary" discourse was acceptable
only if it carried an author's name; every text of poetry or fiction was
obliged to state its author and the date, place, and circumstance of its
writing. The meaning and value attributed to the
text depended upon this information. If by accident
or design a text was presented
anonymously, every effort was made
to locate its author. Literary
anonymity was of interest only as a puzzle to be
solved as, in our day, literary works
are totally dominated by the sovereignty
of the author. (Undoubtedly, these remarks are far too categorical. Criticism has been concerned for some
time now with aspects of a text not fully dependent
upon the notion of an individual creator; studies of genre or the
analysis of recurring
textual motifs and their variations from a norm ther than
author. Furthermore, where in mathematics the author has become little more than a handy reference
for a particular theorem or group of propositions,
the reference to an author
in biology or medicine, or to the
date of his research has a substantially different bearing. This latter reference,
more than simply indicating the source of information, attests to the
"reliability" of the
evidence, since it entails an
appreciation of the techniques and experimental materials
available at a given time
and in a particular laboratory).
The third point concerning this "author-function" is that it
is not formed
spontaneously through the simple attribution of a discourse to an
individual. It results from a complex operation whose purpose is to
construct the rational entity we call an
author. Undoubtedly, this construction is assigned a "realistic" dimension as we speak of an
individual's "profundity"
or "creative" power, his intentions
or the original inspiration manifested in writing. Nevertheless, these aspect of an individual, which we designate as an author (or
which comprise an individual as an author), are projections, in terms always more or less psychological,
of our way of handling texts: in the comparisons we make, the
traits we extract as pertinent, the continuities we assign, or
the exclusions we practice. In addition, all these
operations vary according to the
period and the form of discourse concerned. A "philosopher"
and a "poet" are not
constructed in the same manner; and the author of an
eighteenth-century novel was
formed differently from the modern
novelist.
(...)
Copyrigth © http://foucault.info/documents/