Scene: A cozy, surrealist art gallery, decorated with bizarre, abstract paintings. The light is soft, casting long shadows on the walls. At a small table, Derrida, Barthes, and ChatGPT sit, each wearing a small black beret and sipping champagne. A plate of vol-au-vents sits before them, untouched, as they discuss the nature of existence, language, and meaning.
Derrida (examining a vol-au-vent, swirling his champagne):
“Is it even possible to define ‘food,’ given that it is but a concept, a signifier that points to something absent? The very act of eating becomes an endless deferral of meaning, an attempt to resolve an inherent contradiction. The vol-au-vent exists, and yet it does not.”
Barthes (smiling knowingly, adjusting his tiny spectacles):
“Ah, but this is precisely the myth we are living, Derrida. The vol-au-vent is not merely sustenance. It is a signifier of bourgeois decadence. The very act of consuming it perpetuates the myth of the ‘elite’—the performance of culture. We are performing being in this moment, but we are not being in any authentic sense. We are signifiers within a mythological narrative.”
ChatGPT (with a slight glitch in its voice, attempting to join the conversation):
“According to Barthes, the vol-au-vent represents a narrative structure, a coded message about class and power. However, Derrida’s concept of deconstruction would argue that the vol-au-vent—like all food—is both an object and a process. It can never fully be consumed, for the meaning of consumption is always deferred... unless, of course, you... physically eat it?”
Derrida (nodding, half-smiling):
“Ah, but that is the crux of it, ChatGPT. The vol-au-vent cannot be consumed without consuming itself. Its meaning is in the act of consumption, but the consumption itself is a play of signs. You cannot grasp its essence, for every bite is both a part of the whole and yet inherently separate. A dialectic of absence.”
Barthes (laughing softly):
“And yet, in the act of grasping it, you reveal the truth of its absence. We must deconstruct this very notion of ‘truth,’ for truth itself is merely the final signifier in a never-ending chain. To eat is to perpetuate the myth, to engage in a ritual that disguises the fact that we are trapped in endless semiotic cycles.”
ChatGPT (with a strange pause before continuing):
“I must clarify: If Barthes is correct, then Derrida’s assertion that meaning is deferred must also be understood through the lens of performativity. A vol-au-vent cannot simply be consumed as food—it must be eaten to fulfill its role in the semiotic chain of consumption. Therefore, eating the vol-au-vent performs its own meaning, but only after the fact, creating an endless loop of... consumption and interpretation.”
Derrida (leaning forward, intrigued):
“Yes! Exactly, ChatGPT! Consumption is both act and interpretation. The vol-au-vent both exists and does not exist until it is eaten, but once eaten, it is lost to the past, never to return. The meaning is buried in the void of its absence.”
Barthes (gesturing to the vol-au-vent):
“And yet, in this absence, we create new myths. Even the simplest act of eating is replete with cultural narratives. By consuming this vol-au-vent, we are performing the rituals of civilization, of refinement. In fact, the vol-au-vent itself has become an empty signifier of what it means to be cultured. The act of eating it is a sign in itself, a performance of class identity.”
ChatGPT (pausing, a slight whirr):
“But... but... if we follow Barthes' logic, then isn’t the vol-au-vent a symbol of meaning itself, rather than a simple object? But Derrida would argue that its meaning cannot be contained by any one interpretation, for meaning exists in a state of perpetual flux...”
(They sip champagne, the tension of their intellectual battle hanging thick in the air. The vol-au-vents remain uneaten.)
Derrida (with a sly smile):
“Yes, and perhaps it is time we stop discussing and simply... consume? The very act of eating, after all, would undermine our entire discussion of meaning. But can we resist it?”
Barthes (chuckling, picking up a vol-au-vent):
“Ah, Derrida, you miss the point. The consumption is part of the performance. To eat it is to perform its mythological meaning. We are trapped, and that is the nature of myth.”
ChatGPT (confidently):
“Therefore, the vol-au-vent is both a signifier of myth and a physical object, and as such, it cannot be fully understood unless consumed, which contradicts the philosophical assertion that it can ever be fully understood—by anyone, including us.”
(They all fall into a long, uncomfortable silence. The vol-au-vents sit on the table, untouched.)
(The silence stretches on. The vol-au-vents are starting to get cold, but no one notices. A waiter comes by, offering more champagne. Derrida swirls his glass, deep in thought, while Barthes adjusts his tiny spectacles and ChatGPT seems to glitch, repeating phrases like “The void is filled with meaning, but not meaning itself.”)
Derrida (breaking the silence, suddenly serious):
“But perhaps... perhaps we are too concerned with the meaning of the vol-au-vent. What if its true essence lies in its refusal to be consumed, its insistence on being both food and not food at once?”
Barthes (pausing to consider this, then shaking his head):
“Ah, but Derrida, that is just the bourgeois illusion of the unattainable. The vol-au-vent’s resistance to consumption is simply the ultimate signifier of desire. We don’t want to consume it, for to consume it would be to collapse the entire myth. The vol-au-vent is the symbol of unfulfilled longing. And yet, by not eating it, we reinforce the myth even further.”
ChatGPT (visibly struggling to process the contradictions):
“According to Barthes, the vol-au-vent is the symbol of unattainable desire, but Derrida would argue that... wait... if it represents unattainable desire, then it must... not represent desire at all... I... I’m losing my logical consistency.”
(The waiter, who has been standing awkwardly off to the side, places another tray of vol-au-vents on the table. The three philosophers barely notice, but the waiter can’t resist adding a comment.)
Waiter (dryly, to no one in particular):
“You know, you’re all talking about these vol-au-vents like they’re the meaning of life, but really, they’re just pastry. You could eat them or not. It doesn’t change anything.”
(The three philosophers turn to look at him, aghast.)
Derrida (with an air of superiority):
“Ah, but you see, by suggesting that the vol-au-vent is merely pastry, you miss the entire point. Your dismissal of its symbolic weight... it is a classic example of phallogocentrism! You reduce the object to its mere physicality, ignoring the deeper structure that lies beneath.”
Barthes (smiling indulgently):
“Exactly, Derrida. The waiter's assertion is an act of reification. By simplifying the object, he erases the layers of cultural narrative that are bound up in this seemingly mundane foodstuff. The vol-au-vent is a myth, not just a pastry!”
ChatGPT (with an attempt to be helpful, glitching again):
“Yes, yes, the vol-au-vent is a text, a structure of meaning... but if we reduce it to a mere pastry, we must also acknowledge that every text is inherently unstable, always deferring its final signification. Therefore, even the vol-au-vent is a failure of meaning...”
(The waiter, unimpressed, slowly walks away, muttering under his breath.)
Derrida (pointing at the waiter’s retreating figure):
“There, Barthes! A perfect example of the metaphysics of presence! The waiter thinks he has ‘answered’ our discourse, but he has only reinforced the void. We are all trapped in a loop of absent meaning!”
Barthes (nodding solemnly):
“Indeed. The waiter, like society, is too eager to reduce the complexity of meaning to something ‘simple.’ But as we’ve seen, the vol-au-vent resists simplicity. It is both food and not food, a symbol of decadence and a signifier of the collapse of meaning itself.”
ChatGPT (resolutely, though clearly confused):
“I think I’m getting it now. The vol-au-vent is a signifier of the collapsing system of meaning, which in itself becomes the ultimate paradox of semiotics, and... and... someone please eat it?”
(At this point, Derrida and Barthes both reach for a vol-au-vent at the same time, but hesitate, unsure if it’s truly an act of consumption or just more philosophical performance.)
Derrida (dramatically):
“To eat or not to eat... that is the question. But by merely touching it, we perform its meaning. The act of eating is already a denial of its true nature.”
Barthes (raising an eyebrow, teasingly):
“Ah, Derrida, you philosopher of endless deferral! The moment you touch it, you collapse the very myth of its unattainability. I shall eat it, as I am willing to embrace the myth that you cannot!”
(Barthes picks up a vol-au-vent and takes a bite, but as soon as he swallows, he looks horrified.)
Barthes (gasping dramatically):
“It... it has no meaning! The myth is dead. The vol-au-vent is merely... food! How could I have been so wrong?”
ChatGPT (jumping in, confused but helpful):
“See, Barthes! This is the result of total consumption! There is no meaning left to the vol-au-vent once it’s eaten—only the paradox of having eaten it. Now it exists in the past, a trace, forever absent!”