The Eiffel Tower Is A Tree
The title “The Eiffel Tower is a Tree” for readers may produce a similar reaction in the vein of Arnold Jackson from Diff’rent Strokes, “Watcha talkin’ about, Willis?” However, to support this theoretical claim the title proposes, one must put on semiological spectacles and commence to view the objects beyond what Saussure calls the “social contract” and what Nietzsche calls the “peace treaty” to view these objects (or any object) “beyond the bounds of human existence (Norton Anthology, 752.).” One theory Saussure posits in his student-compiled essays, “Course in General Linguistics,” is that the social contract makes linguistic signs — and therefore meaning — arbitrary and leads to what Saussure designates as one of the faults within language, “name-giving.” Treating language as a “name-giving system” prohibits “any research into its true nature,” or how one interprets its true nature and varying meanings in different societies.
Semiology, “a science that studies the life of signs within society, (Norton Anthology 825 )” allows the reader to consider the Tower and Tree as signs. For Saussure, a sign “designates the whole” and is a combination of two psychological components: a signified (concept) and a signifier (sound-images, or what Saussure calls “auditory images (Norton Anthology 824).” The signifier is sensory. Saussure writes that it is “the impression” of “our senses (Norton Anthology 826-27).” It is concrete, something one can interact with through sight, touch, etc. A signified, which Saussure also notes as the “signification,” is abstract and immaterial. It is what the signifier refers to and has no significance without a relationship to other values. For example, if one denotes the word Tower as a signifier in this essay, one knows it refers to The Eiffel Tower, but out of this context, it differs. If a man walks up to a woman and yells, “tower!” in New York City, the woman is likely to think he is crazy and probably hit him, but in Paris, the Parisian woman is likely to give him directions and assume he’s a tourist. These relationships, these signifiers, give the signified its meaning.
The Eiffel Tower is teeming with signification. Roland Barthes comments that the primary shape of the Tower “confers upon it the vocation of an infinite cipher,” but this is the nature of signs and symbols. They are prone to multiple interpretations and significations. Roland Barthes presents his readers with a hand full of examples: it is the symbol of Paris, a symbol of a scientific revolution, a belvedere overlooking the “essence of Paris,” a way of feeling part of Paris, in the case of Mythologies, an analogy for understanding structuralism, and myriad more symbolic meanings. In these few examples from Barthes, one can see the fickleness and arbitrariness of linguistic units, signs, symbols, and ideas.
The Eiffel Tower is a tree in that a tree, too, has a myriad of symbolic meanings, some that are arbitrary and specific to the beholder. To some, a tree may symbolize peace, love, unity, mother nature, or community. It may be an iconography for a religion, like in the case of Yggdrasil in Norse cosmology, or a symbol of a place, like Redwood National Park. It can be a home for animals or a shade for a picnic. To this writer, it’s now The Eiffel Tower. The Eiffel-tower tree is a signifier that conjures to mind semiotics, structuralism, and, most of all, now The Eiffel Tower. Like Genette notes in his book on paratexts, one has to look at things on a case-by-case basis. There aren’t any hard or fast rules here.


