A work's "core norms and choices" are embodied by an "implied" type of this person according to Wayne C. Booth. A lecture titled for these people borrows the question "What does it matter who is speaking?" from Texts for Nothing to argue for their namesake "function" of discourse. In an essay titled for these people, a passage about a castrato disguised as a woman is used to define an activity as the "destruction of every voice." Michel Foucault gave the lecture "What is [one of these people]?" in response to an essay that argues we should replace them with the "scriptor." The idea that the meaning of these people can be known through text was termed the "intentional fallacy" by W. K. Wimsatt. For 10 points, name this type of person, whose "death" titles a 1967 essay by Roland Barthes. ■END■
| Player | Team | Opponent | Buzz Position | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jack Rado | Ohio | California | 86 | 10 |
| Braden Booth | Missouri A | Asia B | 86 | 10 |
| Saara Katyal | Asia A | Missouri B | 99 | -5 |
| Omkar Marathe | Illinois Orange | Pennsylvania | 105 | 10 |
| Caden Haustein | Missouri B | Asia A | 130 | 10 |
| Rachel Ezrielev | Maryland Red | Arkansas | 132 | 10 |
| Patrick Torre | Maryland Gold | New Jersey A | 138 | 10 |
| Leonard Castine | Kentucky B | Illinois White | 139 | 10 |
| Chris Yoo | Virginia | Liberia | 140 | 10 |
| Charles Young | Illinois Blue | New Jersey B | 140 | 10 |