Brainwash or “Electoral Appeal” ?
Roland Barthes was a famous literary theorist, who wrote Mythologies, in particular Photography and Electoral Appeal, and takes on Saussure’s conception of the signifier and signified and elevates it to, in my opinion, to a much more understandable approach. Barthes uses photography and candidates and their alluring mechanisms to attract voters during election periods. These “mechanisms” in a sense are obscure details that, even I was not aware of, being a voter myself. It is quite fascinating to see how Barthes maneuvers the sign system introduced by Saussure in a way that is more centered on semiology or how something means what it is, rather than what it means.
The photography, in question here, uses Saussure’s sign system to make a voter find the politician “human” and easy going; for the lack of a better word an everyday man/woman. Barthes states, “What is transmitted through the photograph of the candidate are not his plans, but his deep motives…all this style of life of which he is at once the product, the example and the bait.” This shows that using Saussure’s system a candidate will make an “appeal” to the voter by making the voter think about the candidate’s positive qualities as a human and his/her own similarities to the candidate rather than what the candidate is actually going to do in office. This is shown when Barthes mentions that “the photograph is a mirror” that “offers a voter his own likeness.” This is a candidates way, Barthes says, to make himself seem down to earth and not the usual status quo that comes to mind when one thinks or says the word “candidate.” Candidates, according to Barthes, will take photos that will employ this method of “likeness” by taking pictures with their kids or in uniform; that upon seeing these photographs a voter feels either pride and honor for his country and as a majority of voters do have families that also tugs a voter’s heart or as Barthes says, “Photography constitutes here a veritable blackmail by means of moral values: country, army, family, honor, reckless heroism.”
Barthes also goes into great detail about how a photograph of a candidate is taken and whether it is a full face shot or a three quarter face photograph. And the position of a candidates glance really seems to taken on its own meaning here as he describes that a full face photograph shows that a candidate is capable of taking anything on and a three quarter photograph shows that the “gaze is lost nobly in the future” and that a candidate is focusing on bettering the conditions of a country or society and also tilting his/her upwards to the “heavens” for peace.
Overall, Barthes analysis was pretty straight forward while at the same time being influenced by Saussure who I thought was pretty hard to comprehend, ideology and literary wise. Barthes simplifies Saussure’s idea by using a more modern approach to the sign system and ultimately allowing us as readers to create mirrors to his writing.

