Sign in or register
for additional privileges

MACHINE DREAMS

Alexei Taylor, Author

You appear to be using an older verion of Internet Explorer. For the best experience please upgrade your IE version or switch to a another web browser.

Metonymy


The use of metonymy as a literary device implies the substitution of one term, idea, or object, with another. Typically the two are expected to be closely associated with each other, in order for the substitution to actually retain its meaning, while offering an audience (or the reader, depending on what genre of literature/ medium of communication is involved here) a different way of examining the former idea.
Admittedly, the writer/playwright’s purpose for using metonymy in his work isn’t always this. Choosing ‘...all hands on desk…’ as against ‘…everyone, please, help…’ would not really alter an audience/reader’s perspective of the idea of assistance, for instance, and even to a lesser degree the imaginary literary work. But Jonathan Crary’s assertion that from the “…nineteenth century, the relationship between the eye and the optical apparatus…”(Crary 129) became essentially metonymic, isn’t so trivial an example. Crary, borrows from Karl Marx in expressing the idea that rather than being delineated to the status of mere tools, the stereoscopes, kaleidoscopes, dioramas of the nineteenth century were essentially parallels of the human eye. What the one lacked, as a result of structural differences and design, the other complemented, the composite mechanism functioning in order to improve, alter, and/or play upon the observer’s perception of vision. For Crary, the eye and the apparatus had become one machine.
This metonymic relationship between eye and apparatus could be a metonymy for the metonymic relationship between man and machine. Compare Marx’s example (Crary 131) of a factory worker, as merely a tool of the factory, no less exchangeable than the actual machines or implements in use in said factory, to that of the eye and the optical apparatus. So if there could be a metonymy within a metonymy, there could therefore be an infinite order of metonymies? Within another infinite order of metonymies as well?
Comment on this page
 

Discussion of "Metonymy"

Add your voice to this discussion.

Checking your signed in status ...

Previous page on path Metonymy, page 3 of 4 Next page on path

Related:  NAPpostmodern musicTHE UNCONSCIOUSHAND PAINTED DREAM PHOTOGRAPHY: DALI'S TECHNOLOGYAlterityMY INTRODUCTORY PAGEMumler's artTHE ORIGIN OF SUPERMANDream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second before AwakeningSUPERMAN'S JOURNEY TO STYLIN ONLINEEssay Proposal: Salvador Dali's La Persistencia De La MemoriaAuthenticity"I'M PRETTY FLY"EpistemologyTHE ROLE OF TECHNOLOGY IN LA PERSISTENCIA DE LA MEMORIALATCHING ONTO FREUDthe thinkerTHE UNCONSCIOUS MINDFreud's Mental MapDali's Sketch of FreudSNAPSHOTS OF THE DREAM WORLD: THE POWER OF THE CAMERANAPBIBLIOGRAPHYsubjective realityPostmodernDAYDREAMING WITH THE SURREALISTSWORKS CITEDGenderFREUD'S IDEAS OF THE UNCONSCIOUSgreetingsAndre Breton: The Leader of the SurrealistsObserverWorld's Quickest Personality TestSLUMBERSNAPSHOTS OF THE DREAM WORLD: INVOKING THE POWERS OF THE CAMERACREATING UNDER INFLUENCE: FREUD'S PROFOUND INFLUENCE ON THE SURREALISTSIs the left ballerina rotating in the same direction as the middle one? Animated visual Illusion.THE UNCONSCIOUS IN DALI’S LA PERSISTENCIA DE LA MEMORIAPOP-CULTURE THEMED T-SHIRTSthe pillsSymbolicCOME. SLEEP.BIBLIOGRAPHYepistemeLA PERSISTENCIA DE LA MEMORIA: DALI'S DEPICTION OF THE UNCONSCIOUSA Cross-section of the Surrealists: "Revolutionaries or Artists?"MAN OF STEEL: AN ETHNOGRAPHYthe observer?LA PERSISTENCIA DE LA MEMORIA: A DREAMSCAPEdifferent culturesProfane Illumination