Blog #2
I found both the article “The Eiffel Tower” by Roland Barthes and “Egg McNothin'” by Ian Bogost to be fascinating as both article seems to interconnect at a certain point. In the “The Eiffel Tower”, Barthes wrote, “the Tower is there; incorporated into daily life until you can no longer grant it any specific attribute, determined merely to persist, like a rock or the river…”(Barthes, 3). The tower seen by Parisians becomes nothing to them because they see it everyday. It is nothing special as it is not a luxury. Like Bogost said, “The greatest luxury is the one we cannot have – or at least, the one we cannot have very often.”(Barthes, 1). When tourists come to Paris, they want to see the Eiffel Tower because it is a sight they never see before, therefore they look at it as a luxurious object.
Furthermore, both Hugo and Michelet’s bird’s – eye view contributed to making the Eiffel Tower a landmark therefore attracting people who never saw it come to Paris and look at it.(Barthes, 11). It becomes a rite and will feel like something is amiss if you don’t visit the Eiffel Tower. This can relate to looking at a panorama. As we look at a panorama, we try to look for things we are familiar with, but as we see something different or something missing, we try to decipher it.(Barthes, 10). We don’t want difference to what we know, but have familiarity to our history.
In the article “The Eiffel Tower”, Barthes writes about how the tower is useless and that humanity made the tower natural by Hugo and Michelet’s bird’s – eye view.(Barthes, 8). Before the bird’s – eye view, Gustave Eiffel, would say the tower is not completely useless as it can server future purposes such as aerodynamic measurements and studies of the resistance of substances, but Barthes believes that this is nothing but excuses.(Barhtes, 6). Barthes believe this is nothing more than a dream created by Gustave’s imagination where he wants to satisfy a great function.
The tower can further seen as useless because as tourists come and look at the tower, they will get confused as to what they are suppose to do. They can look at the tower from the outside and marvel at the architecture, but there is nothing inside the tower.(Barthes, 7). There is nothing particularly special about the Eiffel Tower. It is just a hunk of metal in Paris made special by Romanticism. Without Romanticism, the Eiffel Tower can be seen as useless. Only a tower that scrapes the sky. It is basically what Ian Bogost says. “The greatest luxury is the one we cannot have – or at least, the one we cannot have very often.”(Bogost, 1). The tower becomes luxurious due to its Romanticism and anyone who hasn’t seen it wants to see what the big deal is. Without the Romanticism, it would just be another tower that anyone can see as just a tower. This is related to McDonald’s breakfast menu. The breakfast menu is served during a certain time making it special. A person have to come at a certain time interval just to have an Egg McMuffin therefore making it luxurious. Without the time interval, the breakfast menu will slowly lose its value as special. It becomes ordinary as anyone can buy it and eat it at any time. What was luxurious will become ordinary as there is no special meaning behind the object.


