Semiotics: The Science & Cultural Interpretations of Signs
Mar 21, 2016
Semiotics:
The Science & Cultural Interpretations of Signs
Binary Oppositions in Structuralism
langue, parole; signifer – signified; Diachronic – Synchronic; Axis of combination - Axis of selectionMetaphor - metonymy
Language/Literature as an enclosed system with two Axes
Syntagmatic/Combination(narrative structure:roles + actions); metonymy
Paradigmatic/Selection
:
Thematic structure: Motifs, mythemes, metaphors, etc.
Roman Jakobson’s studies of poetry and aphasia
metaphor – substitution of one with something similar –poetry –Romanticism/Symbolismmetonymy – replacement of one with something close by
-- novel --Realism
Similarity disorder – inability to deal with “associative” relationships in language.Contiguity disorder –inability to organize words into higher units (e.g. sentence).
“The poetic function projects the principle of equivalence from the axis of selection into the axis of combination.” Jakobson
Jakobson’s six factors in speech and
their interactions Context/Soceity, History
Message
Addresser AddresseeAuthor Contact Reader
Code/Text
* Usu. in one speech event, one factor will dominate over the others. For instance, the “emotive” intent of the address dominant his/her use of code, the context as well as the contact.
C. S. Peirce: Three Kinds of SignsBased on relations between signifier and signified
Icon – resemblance (This refers to one’s home thru’ resemblance, to websites’ homepage by convention. )
Index– factual/causal connection
Symbol -- rule of convention or habitual association = love
The connection is the most arbitrary.
Examples: Iconic functions in poetry
The use of poetic form (iconic signs in poetry) to refer back to itself.Symbolic signs in poetry can be easily found; how about indexical signs? Or maybe we can say that the indexical signs—such as the wreckage in “Ozymandias” take on symbolic meanings in the poem. ) Example 1: e. e. cummings’ breaking the iconic sign of sonnet
"next to of course god america i love you land of the pilgrims' and so forth oh say can you see by the dawn's early my country 'tis of centuries come and go and are no more what of it we should worry in every language even deafanddumb thy sons acclaim your glorious name by gorry by jingo by gee by gosh by gum why talk of beauty what could be more beaut- iful than these heroic happy dead who rushed like lions to the roaring slaughter they did not stop to think they died instead then shall the voice of liberty be mute?"
e. e. cummings’ breaking the iconic sign of sonnet
He spoke. And drank rapidly a glass of water
-- e. e. cummings; 1926
This Is Just To Say I have eatenthe plumsthat were in the iceboxand which you were probablysavingfor breakfast
Forgive methey were deliciousso sweetand so cold.
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)
Example2: the “forming” of trivial matter In daily life.
Roland Barthes: Production of Sign and Myth
All social practices as sign-systems and thus are open to cultural interpretation (or de-mystification). e.g. the “langue” of clothes and food
system: a. blouse, shirt, T-shirt ; b. skirt, trouserssentence: an ensemble of blouse + skirt + high
heeled shoes X snickers blouse + jeans + snickers Xnot for concert
Fashion and Myth
“The clothes for this summer is made predominantly of silk.” (prescriptive rather than descriptive)“It’s nice to wear while walking on a dock with your lover.”
a signifier + signified =
Different levels of signification: primary signification & secondary signification
primary signification:
Secondary signification
sign (full)--denotation
Sign (empty)/Form
+
content = sign --connotation
signifier (Rose) + signified (Flower)= (empty)
Different levels of signification: example
primary signification:
Secondary signification
sign (full)--denotation
Form( )+
content (Love)= sign --connotation
“Myth Today”
a second-order semiological system
regression from meaning to form, from the linguistic signto the mythical signifier. ...the form does not suppress the meaning, it only impoverishes it, it puts it at a distance...
elements of an ad.1. the slogan (or copy)2. the visual image--with the slogan, it implies a story 3. supplementary --color, design == where the product, the words are placed – colour, – size and position, – texture – celebrity endorsement
Ads: Example 1
Ads: Example 2
Ads: Example 3
Ads: Example 4
Ads’ languages -- from Ways of Seeing
The romantic use of nature (leaves, trees, water) to create a place where innocence can be found. The posed taken up to denote stereotypes of women: serene mothers (madonna), free wheeling secretary (actress, king's mistress), perfect hostess (spectator-owner's wife), sex-object (Venus, nymph surprised), etc. The special sexual emphasis given to women's legs.
Ads’ languages -- from Ways of Seeing (2)
The materials particularly used to indicate luxury: engraved metal, furs, polished leather, etc.The physical stance of men conveying wealth and virility.The equation of drinking and success. The man as knight (horseman) become motorist.
Key words for Structualist and Semiotic approaches:
I. Following language as a model II. Disclosing the deep/basic structure of a text,
which is a (combination or selection) system of meaning composed of basic elements such as:
Questions: Reductive? Disregarding meaning, textual complexities, or the author’s intention?De-centering, dehumanizing? Do we really think in terms of binaries?
How is our social existence modeled after language as a system of relations?– From work to text (textuality); – From identity to system of relations; – From myth to ideology; – “Myth -- the complex system of images and beliefs
which a society constructs in order to sustain and authenticate its sense of being.”
– From structuralism/semiotics to marxism
-- binaries, or semiotic rectangles, -- roles/actant and functions, or narrateme, -- story and discourse,-- narrator- narratee, -- metaphor and metonymy,-- grammatical parts of speech, or lexemes, -- signs or signification on different levels (signifier and signified).