LM 35 - Structuralism in Literature: Meaning, Theory, Key Concepts and Global Impact
Structuralism in Literature: Meaning, Theory, Key Concepts and Global Impact What if meaning is not created— but structured? What if the words we use and the stories we tell are shaped by invisible systems beneath language? Structuralism begins with this idea. It challenges the belief that meaning comes from authors or emotions. Instead, it argues that meaning emerges from structures— patterns, codes and relationships within language. Across cultures, stories repeat familiar patterns. Not by chance— by structure. Structuralism does not ask what a text means. It asks how meaning becomes possible. Introduction Structuralism is not tied to one culture or tradition. It is a global framework that reshaped how literature is understood. It began in linguistics and expanded into anthropology, philosophy and literary criticism. The shift was clear: from individual authors to underlying systems. Across World Literature, texts can be compared through shared structures— narratives, symbols and pat...