Culler interprets Barthes's writing career as a succession of phases, each marked by an impatience with, and desire to overthrow, the systematic contribution, with its tendency to orthodoxy, of his earlier efforts. Barthes championed la nouvelle critique, an assemblage of approaches taking inspiration from psychoanalysis, structural linguistics, semiology, comparative anthropology and the study of myth, and came to embody it. His quarrel with French academic orthodoxies was that they permitted themselves an unexamined eclecticism of approach in analysing classical texts, whose meanings were taken to be self-evident, to redound to national glory or propriety, and to be unproblematically substantiated by a historical signified--the 'fact' of Jansenist ideology, for example, or the shape of Racine's career or character of his preoccupations. This criticism was concerned above all to demystify the givens of bourgeois ideology, in principle through a 'poetics' of the institutional practices of reading that make them possible--indeed render them inescapable (i.e., the designation of what exists, what is important, what literary; how literary references and formulations join). Culler is frustrated, to some degree, which how the end of Barthes's career, when he is complacently tenured at the College de France and has become a mass culture figure, tends to recuperate what his iconoclastic readings in Mythologies exposed. Photographs, for instance, purportedly lay bare the unmediated fact of slavery--something the earlier Barthes would never claim. The late insistence on pleasure and the bodily reintroduces subjectivity, while making the text the site of a radical instability (both suggesting practices of writing that perpetually threaten to efface the self and ineluctably constituting the self out of no more than figuration). This suggests that, by the end, Barthes had gone beyond any 'science' of interpretation he had once held out for; though, at the same time, it may just indicate how much the seeds of poststructuralism are latent with 60s structuralism, including the structural study of narrative, itself.