Even in the most naïve sense, without qualification, the term
signposes great difficulties. The word designates any thing, whether gesture, mark, token, symbol or even natural event, that expresses, indicates or refers to a meaning or to something else. Yet even that most general and innocent statement offers at best a futile answer, as if to a question that already presupposes it: “what does the word
signde
signate?” The presupposition of a prior meaning infects all interpretations of the word
sign, which is always thus figured as a latecomer, standing in for something, a thing or a concept that precedes it. But the concept
sign, if it does refer back to a prior meaning, refers back only to itself—that which means something other than itself.
In the nineteenth century, the
1989 words
Citation: Phillips, John, Chrissie Tan. "Sign, The". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 17 May 2005 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/stopics.php?rec=true&UID=1012, accessed 26 November 2024.]