Interpretation

From Geography

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: Every observation is not entirely objective. This is because all those observations are derrived from things that happened in the past. In short: an interpretation is a personal judgement ...)
Line 1: Line 1:
Every observation is not entirely objective. This is because all those observations are derrived from things that happened in the past. In short: an interpretation is a personal judgement about the meaning of a given situation, a text, a place and so on.
Every observation is not entirely objective. This is because all those observations are derrived from things that happened in the past. In short: an interpretation is a personal judgement about the meaning of a given situation, a text, a place and so on.
According to Hall (1997) Meaning and [[representation]] seem to belong to the interpretative side of the human and cultural sciences.  
According to Hall (1997) Meaning and [[representation]] seem to belong to the interpretative side of the human and cultural sciences.  
-
Interpretations never produce a final moment or absolute truth. Instead, interpretations are always followed by other interpretations, in an endless chain, which creates a 'circle of meaning' (Hall, 1997: 42). [[Jacques Derrida]] compared interpretation with writing: writing always leads to more writing. Differences, he argued, can never me wholly captured within any binary system (Derrida in Hall, 1997:42).
+
Interpretations never produce a final moment or absolute truth. Instead, interpretations are always followed by other interpretations, in an endless chain, which creates a 'circle of meaning' (Hall, 1997: 42). [[Jacques Derrida]] compared interpretation with writing: writing always leads to more writing. Differences, he argued, can never be wholly captured within any binary system (Derrida in Hall, 1997:42).
-
 
+

Revision as of 19:10, 12 September 2011

Every observation is not entirely objective. This is because all those observations are derrived from things that happened in the past. In short: an interpretation is a personal judgement about the meaning of a given situation, a text, a place and so on. According to Hall (1997) Meaning and representation seem to belong to the interpretative side of the human and cultural sciences. Interpretations never produce a final moment or absolute truth. Instead, interpretations are always followed by other interpretations, in an endless chain, which creates a 'circle of meaning' (Hall, 1997: 42). Jacques Derrida compared interpretation with writing: writing always leads to more writing. Differences, he argued, can never be wholly captured within any binary system (Derrida in Hall, 1997:42).


References

Hall, S. (1997). Representation: cultural representations and signifying practices. The Open University, Walton Hall.


Published by Pauline van Heugten

Personal tools