Verbatim quote · defining passage
“Meaning, then, is the maintenance of the field of semblances, that is, the condition where all signs are objects and all objects signs, in varying degrees and articulations. Once even something so trivial as a piece of food (where there is plenty) becomes only food and not at all a sign of some mode of sharing, meaning collapses; once even the most abstract or stylized articulation of signs can no longer be “inhabited”—converted into a set of practices—the same thing happens.”
— Adam Katz, The Grammar of Desire and Resentment · Dec 2009 · GABlog
Evidences
Read in context →center.study/q/95eea2eb7a12