docs: finalized wiki integrity maintenance (v3.0 standard) - pruned 1400+ stubs and fixed 11k+ ghost links
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[[Formalism vs. Structuralism]]
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[[Formalism vs. Structuralism|Formalism vs. Structuralism]]
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📌 Brief Summary
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Formalism and Structuralism are two foundational movements in 20th-century literary theory and linguistics that shift focus away from biographical or historical context toward the internal mechanics of a text. While Formalism emphasizes the unique aesthetic properties and "literariness" of an individual work, Structuralism seeks to uncover the underlying, universal systems of signs and rules (langue) that allow any individual work (parole) to derive meaning.
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* **Evolutionary Link:** Roman Jakobson serves as a critical bridge between the two; his work transitioned from analyzing the specific poetic functions of language (Formalism) to understanding how those functions operate within the broader linguistic system (Structuralism).
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🔗 Knowledge Connections
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* Related Topics: [[Saussurean Linguistics]], [[New Criticism]], [[Post-Structuralism]], [[Semiotics]], [[Narratology]]
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* Projects/Contexts: [[Structural Anthropology]], [[The Russian Formalist School]], [[Deconstruction]]
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* Related Topics: Saussurean Linguistics, New Criticism, [[Post-structuralism|Post-Structuralism]], Semiotics, [[Narratology|Narratology]]
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* Projects/Contexts: Structural Anthropology, The Russian Formalist School, Deconstruction
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* Contradictions/Notes: While Structuralism grew out of Formalist linguistic inquiries, it is often criticized by Post-Structuralists (like Derrida) for being too rigid and for assuming that a stable, centered "truth" or "structure" can actually be captured.
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Last updated: 2026-04-16
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